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TRANSCRIPT
DOCTORAL THESIS
Title The Dynamics of Business Model Transformation:
Innovation and Internationalization
Presented by Margarete Barbara Bowien, geb. Kalinowski
Centre ESADE BUSINESS SCHOOL
Department Strategy & General Management and
People Management & Organization
Directed by Prof. Luis Vives, PhD (ESADE)
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Doctoral Dissertation
Doctor of Philosophy in Management
Title:
The Dynamics of Business Model Transformation:
Innovation and Internationalization
Presented by: Margarete Barbara Bowien, geb. Kalinowski
Department: Department of Strategy & General Management and
People Management & Organization (ESADE)
Directed by: Prof. Luis Vives, PhD (ESADE)
Barcelona, 2015
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To my beloved parents:
For teaching me that hard work, humility and respect toward others are the only
virtues to strive for as everything else is out of our control.
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-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐-‐
To my beloved husband:
For being a living lesson of integrity, humility, patience and love for our family.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Complexity theory teaches us that one needs the right contextual
conditions to stay at the edge and not drift away towards either extreme. This
dissertation has become its own complex system consisting of ideas that interact
in non-‐trivial ways and evolve at the edge of chaos – a state between structure
and chaos, where the author throws parts of the initial plan and agenda overboard
to explore new possibilities but also pulls everything together to achieve the
overall goal. I would have never completed this work without the help and
inspiration of many people that I would like to express my profound appreciation
and immense gratitude to. I would like to thank the ESADE academic community
for their support in the realization of this thesis.
First and foremost, I am deeply indebted to the excellent and inspiring
guidance of my advisor Professor Luis Vives who has been reassuring, heartening
and supporting over the years, always with a sense of responsibility towards me. I
truly appreciate encouraging me to pursue a research topic I am truly passionate
about. I am particularly grateful for his continuous and generous support in
achieving my academic and personal goals. I am very grateful for his diligence, for
entrusting my ability, for giving me the opportunity to work with him and for
teaching me to teach. Moreover, I am very thankful to him for being a living
inspiration of academic rigor, passion for strategy and business models, humility
and kindness. By learning from his expertise, I have been able to sharpen my
theorizing and thinking abilities. I am grateful for the warmth and respect he
always extended to me and encouraged me in every situation. I will always be
indebted to him.
I am also very thankful to Professor Pedro Parada for his enthusiasm,
encouragement, inspiration, support and respect, and all the teaching
opportunities he always extended to me and made me light up. Further, I will
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always be indebted to Professor Shaker A. Zahra for inspiring and encouraging me,
and Professor Eduard Bonet for introducing me to the topic of rhetoric. His
conferences and courses were a great source of inspiration. I also thank Professor
Alfons Sauquet for fascinating and inspiring me about management and research,
and teaching me to actively listen with both ears. I am also very grateful to
Professor J.C. Spender, who always believed in me, inspired, challenged and
encouraged me. I always enjoyed our long discussions and I will always remain
indebted for teaching me to understand and appreciate the theory of the firm and
get inspired by Edith Penrose.
I also extend my gratitude to Professor Jonathan Wareham for sparking my
intrinsic motivation, drive, dedication and courage to restlessly pursue my goals
and set objectives and believe in myself no matter what hurdles life throws at me.
He taught me to understand and appreciate people and politics. I thank Professor
Nuria Agell for her tireless support she offered me under many circumstances and
her dedication to make the ESADE PhD program a valuable experience for each of
us. At the same time, I express my thanks to Pilar Gallego, Olga Linares, and Silvia
Espin for their endless support through all PhD related administrative processes,
always with a great sense of humor. I would like to express very special thanks to
M.Angels Augé for her support and help with all academic processes and
endeavors related to our department. She simply is irreplaceable and always
extended incredible warmth, kindness and responsibility towards me. I also thank
Professor Vicenta Sierra for her understanding and flexibility in supporting my
academic endeavors at the finishing line of my PhD dissertation.
Many thanks to Professor Anita McGahan, Professor Maurizio Zollo,
Professor Silviya Svejenova, Professor Joan Enric Ricart, Professor Thomas Ritter,
Professor Jay Anand, Professor Sven Laudien, Professor Patrick Spieth, Professor
Xavier Mendoza, Professor Alfred Vernis, Professor Alberto Gimeno, Professor
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François Collet and Professor Jan Brinckmann for many inspiring conversations and
for providing me with insightful comments on my academic work. Further, I am
very thankful to Professor Ricard Santomà and Daniela Freund at Sant Ignasi
School of Tourism & Hospitality Management at the Ramon Llull University for
their support in my academic development and all the teaching opportunities they
extended to me. They always made me feel very welcome and valuable to the
university. I also thank my PhD fellows I met during this complex journey for all our
discussions, their encouragement and motivation to always push the boundaries
and continue no matter how difficult the path becomes. I thank Itziar Castelló,
Andreas Hanhardt, Francesco di Lorenzo, Jan Hohberger, Francesco Castellaneta,
Daniella Laureiro-‐Martinez and Daniel Albert. Particularly, I will always be grateful
to Christina Berg Johansen and Sondos Abdelgawad for being a great source of
inspiration and belief. They taught me humility and the importance of belief in our
inner strength and balance. I will always remember all their support.
Last but not least, without the strong backbone, endless love and support
of my family this complex endeavor would have never been possible. I am very
grateful to my beloved parents for providing me with courage and strength over
the years, nurturing my intrinsic motivation and passion, and opening up to me all
the possibilities in life a human being can dream of. Their profound dedication to
education, courage and commitment to a better life, love, giving, and appraisal of
beauty will always inspire me. Also, I will always remain grateful to my beloved
husband for his endless love, support and never-‐ending belief in me. He always
encouraged me to follow my passion, cherish the beauty of our life, and enjoy the
simple moments in life. I will always remain grateful for all his support on all
dimensions one can only think of and for always being there for me.
Finally I would like to thank ESADE for their financial support.
Thank you all.
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ABSTRACT
In recent years, business models have gained substantial momentum in
academic research. As a response to recent calls in strategic management
literature for novel research, this dissertation extends the study of business
models by exploring a dimension rarely considered in literature: business model
transformation and its underlying dynamics. Despite the prominent role of
business models in recent research, little is known about how business models
transform over time and adapt to evolving ecosystems. In three essays, I address
this gap by exploring the notion of business model transformation enabled
through its dynamics of business model innovation and business model growth
through internationalization. Advancing on the empirical findings from the three
essays and the integrative insights that move the business model research agenda
forward, I propose a conceptual model and introduce business model
transformation as a multi-‐dimensional construct, which resides in the focal firm’s
strategic choices. These choices, in turn, are reflected by the constraints that
determine the focal firm’s opportunity space, which is to be realized with the
objective to increase the focal firm’s value creation and value capture potential. I
theoretically build on strategic management research as well as on organization,
institutional and internationalization theory as the three pillars of this thesis,
contributing to the current debates within the strategy, innovation and
international management fields. While maintaining the focus on theory
development, in a semi-‐constructivist approach, I employ diverse research
methods, such as theoretical analysis, grounded theory, and multiple case studies
to develop and test various propositions, as well as establish the concept of
business model transformation in literature. The thesis concludes with fruitful
avenues for future research.
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RESUMEN
En los últimos años, los modelos de negocio han cobrado sustancial
impulso en la investigación académica. Como respuesta a las recientes peticiones
de la literatura en dirección estratégica, esta tesis extiende el estudio de modelos
de negocio mediante la exploración de una dimensión raramente considerada en
la literatura: la transformación del modelo de negocio y sus dinámicas
subyacentes. A pesar del papel destacado de los modelos de negocio en la
investigación reciente, poco se sabe acerca de cómo los modelos de negocio se
transforman en el tiempo y cómo se adaptan a ecosistemas cambiantes. A través
de tres ensayos, esta tesis explora la transformación de modelos de negocio
enfocándose en la dinámica de la innovación de los modelos de negocio y la
transformación de los modelos de negocio en la internacionalización. Avanzando
en los hallazgos empíricos de los tres ensayos y las ideas integradoras que
impulsan la agenda de investigación modelo de negocio, propongo un nuevo
modelo conceptual y presento la transformación del modelo de negocio como un
constructo multidimensional, que reside en las elecciones estratégicas de la
empresa. Estos, a su vez, se reflejan por las restricciones que determinan espacio
de oportunidades de la empresa focal, que ha de ser realizado con el objetivo de
aumentar la creación y captura de valor potencial de la misma. Esta tesis tiene
como pilares la investigación en dirección estratégica así como la teoría de
organización, basándose en la teoría institucional y la internacionalización, lo que
contribuye a los debates actuales dentro de los campos de estrategia, innovación y
dirección internacional. Mientras se mantiene el foco en el desarrollo de la teoría,
en un enfoque semi-‐constructivista, la tesis emplea diversos métodos de
investigación, como el análisis teórico, grounded theory, y varios estudios de caso
para desarrollar y testear diversas proposiciones, así como establecer el concepto
de transformación de modelos de negocio en literatura. La tesis concluye con
potenciales vías para el desarrollo de futuras investigaciones.
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RESUM
Els darrers anys, els models de negoci han experimentat un impuls notable
en la recerca acadèmica. Com a resposta a les demandes recents de la literatura
en matèria de direcció estratègica, aquesta tesi amplia l’estudi dels models de
negoci mitjançant l’anàlisi d‘una dimensió que rarament s‘estudia a la literatura: la
transformació del model de negoci i les seves dinàmiques internes. Malgrat el
paper destacat dels models de negoci en la recerca recent, se sap poc sobre com
es transformen els models de negoci en el temps i com s’adapten a ecosistemes
canviants. A través de tres assaigs, aquesta tesi explora la transformació dels
models de negoci centrant-‐se en la dinàmica de la innovació dels models de negoci
i la transformació d’aquests models amb la internacionalització. Avançant en les
conclusions empíriques dels tres assaigs i les idees integradores que impulsen
l’agenda de la recerca sobre els models de negoci, proposo un nou model
conceptual i presento la transformació del model de negoci com un constructe
multidimensional, que es basa en les eleccions estratègiques de l’empresa.
Aquestes eleccions, a seu torn, es reflecteixen en les limitacions que determinen
l’espai d‘oportunitat de l‘empresa focal, que s‘ha de realitzar amb l‘objectiu
d‘incrementar la creació de valor de l‘empresa focal i el seu potencial de captació
de valor. Aquesta tesi té com a fonaments la recerca en direcció estratègica i la
teoria de l’organització, i també es basa en la teoria institucional i la
internacionalització, cosa que contribueix als debats actuals en els camps de
l’estratègia, la innovació i la direcció internacional. Alhora que se centra en el
desenvolupament de la teoria i adopta un enfocament semiconstructivista, la tesi
utilitza diversos mètodes de recerca, com l’anàlisi teòrica, la grounded theory, i
recorre a diversos casos per desenvolupar i demostrar diverses proposicions, i
també el concepte de transformació dels models de negoci en la literatura. La tesi
conclou proposant potencials vies per al desenvolupament d’investigacions
futures.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF FIGURES ..................................................................................................... XVIII
LIST OF TABLES .......................................................................................................... XIX
CHAPTER 1: GENERAL INTRODUCTION ................................................................... 1 1.1 MAKING SENSE OF BUSINESS MODEL DYNAMICS: THEORETICAL INTRODUCTION ....... 1
1.2 BUSINESS MODEL AS A COMPLEMENT TO STRATEGY ................................................... 8
1.3 RESEARCH MOTIVATION, OBJECTIVE, AND STRUCTURE ............................................ 12
1.4 INTRODUCTION OF RESEARCH QUESTIONS ................................................................. 18
1.5 OVERVIEW OF THE ESSAYS AND THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS ............................................ 22
1.6 INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH METHODOLOGY .......................................................... 27
1.7 THEORY DEVELOPMENT FORM DIFFERENT TRADITIONS ............................................ 30
CHAPTER 2: MULTI-PERSPECTIVE VIEW ON VALUE CREATION AND VALUE CAPTURE THROUGH BUSINESS MODELS: A REVIEW AND RESEARCH AGENDA ...................................................................................................... 33
2.1 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 34
2.2 MULTI-LEVEL REVIEW OF THE BUSINESS MODEL CONCEPT ...................................... 37
2.2.1 Strategic level of analysis ................................................................................... 45
2.2.2 Organizational level of analysis ......................................................................... 46
2.2.3 Operational level of analysis ............................................................................. 48
2.3 REVISITING: THREE PERSPECTIVES ON BUSINESS MODEL CONCEPTUALIZATION ....... 50
2.3.1 Strategic perspective: Business models as set of choices .................................. 52
2.3.2 Organizational perspective: Business models as activity-systems ..................... 54
2.3.3 Normative perspective: Business models as models .......................................... 56
2.4 THE NOTION OF VALUE CREATION AND VALUE CAPTURE ......................................... 58
2.4.1 Strategic perspective .......................................................................................... 58
2.4.2 Organizational perspective ................................................................................ 60
2.4.3 Normative perspective ........................................................................................ 62
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2.5 DISCUSSION ................................................................................................................ 64
2.6 AVENUES FOR FUTURE RESEARCH ............................................................................. 69
2.7 CONCLUSION .............................................................................................................. 72
CHAPTER 3: HOW DO FIRMS ADAPT TO AN EVOLVING ECOSYSTEM? THE CASE OF BUSINESS MODEL INNOVATION IN THE GERMAN DENTAL INDUSTRY. ........................................................................................................................ 73
3.1 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 74
3.2 THEORETICAL BACKGROUND ..................................................................................... 78
3.3 RESEARCH SETTING: THE GERMAN DENTAL INDUSTRY ............................................ 81
3.4 METHODOLOGY ......................................................................................................... 85
3.4.1 Sample selection and data collection ................................................................ 85
3.4.2 Data analysis ..................................................................................................... 89
3.5 FINDINGS .................................................................................................................... 96
3.5.1 Goal to value capture ........................................................................................ 98
3.5.2 Specialization .................................................................................................. 100
3.5.3 Concentration .................................................................................................. 102
3.5.4 Environmental constraints ............................................................................... 104
3.6 DISCUSSION .............................................................................................................. 106
3.7 LIMITATIONS AND DIRECTIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH ......................................... 114
3.8 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................ 115
CHAPTER 4: LEVERAGE OR DEVELOP? HOW EMERGING MARKET MULTINATIONALS MANAGE THEIR BUSINESS MODELS DURING THEIR INTERNATIONALIZATION. ....................................................................................... 117
4.1 INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................... 118
4.2 THEORETICAL BACKGROUND ................................................................................... 123
4.2.1 Emerging market multinationals and their internationalization strategies .... 123
4.2.2 Notion of the business model ........................................................................... 135
4.3 INTERNATIONALIZATION AND BUSINESS MODEL MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES ........ 138
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4.3.1 Conceptual framework ..................................................................................... 141
4.3.2 Leveraging of traditional business model in emerging markets ...................... 148
4.3.3 Leveraging of traditional business model in developed markets ..................... 151
4.3.4 Developing new business model in emerging markets ..................................... 156
4.3.5 Developing new business model in developed markets .................................... 160
4.4 DISCUSSION .............................................................................................................. 163
4.4.1 Theoretical implications ................................................................................... 167
4.4.2 Managerial implications .................................................................................. 170
4.4.3 Avenues for future research ............................................................................. 171
4.5 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................. 172
CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION, CONTRIBUTIONS, IMPLICATIONS, LIMITATIONS AND FUTURE RESEARCH .............................................................. 173
5.1 DISCUSSION: CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK OF BUSINESS MODEL TRANSFORMATION 174
5.2 COLLECTIVE CONCLUSIONS AND CONTRIBUTIONS ................................................... 179
5.3 COLLECTIVE IMPLICATIONS ...................................................................................... 185
5.3.1 Theoretical implications ................................................................................... 185
5.3.2 Organizational and managerial implications .................................................. 192
5.4 LIMITATIONS AND FUTURE RESEARCH ..................................................................... 196
5.5 FINAL SUMMING UP .................................................................................................. 207
REFERENCES ................................................................................................................. 209
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LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1.1: Structure of dissertation portfolio ............................................ 17
Figure 1.2: Research questions of respective chapters .............................. 21
Figure 2.1: Three perspectives on business model conceptualization ....... 67
Figure 3.1: Model of business model innovation ...................................... 107
Figure 4.1: Development of research on emerging multinationals .......... 119
Figure 4.2: Current themes in research on emerging multinationals ....... 126
Figure 4.3a: Research on EMNEs: Context of emerging multinationals ... 128
Figure 4.3b: Research on EMNEs: Internationalization ............................ 129
Figure 4.3c: Research on EMNEs: Entry mode decision & mode of entry 130
Figure 4.3d: Research on EMNEs: Competitive advantage ....................... 131
Figure 4.3e: Research on EMNEs: Relationships & entrepreneurship ...... 132
Figure 4.4: Internationalization strategies of emerging multinationals ... 143
Figure 4.5: Internationalization strategies: Case study illustrations ......... 165
Figure 5.1: Conceptual framework of business model transformation .... 178
Figure 5.2: PhD research program: Future research ................................. 200
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LIST OF TABLES
Table 2.1: Proliferation of definitions .......................................................... 39
Table 2.2a: Business models: Past conceptualizations ................................ 40
Table 2.2b: Business models: Past conceptualizations ................................ 41
Table 2.2c: Business models: Past conceptualizations ................................ 42
Table 2.2d: Business models: Past conceptualizations ................................ 43
Table 2.2e: Business models: Past conceptualizations ................................ 44
Table 2.3: Business models: Past conceptualizations .................................. 51
Table 2.4: What is not a business model ..................................................... 71
Table 3.1: Case descriptions ........................................................................ 91
Table 3.2: Coding scheme for identifying business model elements .......... 92
Table 3.3a: Summary of business model based on coding scheme ............ 93
Table 3.3b: Summary of business model based on coding scheme ............ 94
Table 3.3c: Summary of business model based on coding scheme ............. 95
Table 3.4: Antecedents of business model innovation ................................ 97
Table 4.1: Research on emerging multinationals in literature .................. 124
Table 4.2: Categories in research of emerging multinationals .................. 125
Table 4.3: Case studies of emerging multinationals .................................. 143
Table 4.4a: Summary of case study illustrations ....................................... 144
Table 4.4b: Summary of case study illustrations ....................................... 145
Table 4.4c: Summary of case study illustrations ....................................... 146
Table 4.4d: Summary of case study illustrations ....................................... 147
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Chapter 1: General Introduction
1.1 Making Sense of Business Model Dynamics:
Theoretical Introduction
In recent years, business models not only have been the focus of substantial
attention from practitioners (Lindgardt, Reeves, Stalk, & Deimler, 2009; Pohle &
Chapman, 2006), but they have also gained momentum in academic research
(DaSilva & Trkman, 2014; Schneider & Spieth, 2013; Zott et al., 2011). Business
models have been integral to trading and economic behavior since pre-‐classical
times (Teece, 2010). Introduced by Peter Drucker in 1954 (Drucker, 1954), the
business model concept became common with the advent of the Internet in the
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mid 1990s (Magretta, 2002). The notion of business model is used to describe
diverse phenomena in different contexts, is studied from various perspectives, and
has numerous uses. While there are attempts in literature at identifying common
themes and a common conceptualization that unify contributions in the received
literature on business models (Ghaziani & Ventresca, 2005; Morris, Schindehutte,
& Allen, 2005; George & Bock, 2011; Zott, Amit, & Massa, 2011), a common
theoretical ground is still to emerge (Vives & Svejenova, 2011). However, scholars
emphasize different roles of business models (see Spieth, Schneckenberg, & Ricart,
2014 for an overview). Consequently, it is crucial to explain explicitly my
understanding and conceptualization of the business model applied in this thesis.
In its broadest sense, the business model is found to communicate the core logic
of the firm (Teece, 2010), constitute the firm’s architectural backbone (Shafer,
Smith, & Linder, 2005), and act as critical construct for understanding the firm’s
value creation and value capture mechanisms (Amit & Zott, 2001; Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Magretta, 2002;
Svejenova, Planellas, & Vives, 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010).
Despite the conceptual pluralism that has uncovered novel ways to explain
what business models are and how they work (George & Bock, 2011; Spieth et al.,
2014; Wirtz et al., 2015; Zott et al., 2011), scholars broadly agree on the activity-‐
system perspective of the business model in which the business model depicts a
system of interdependent activities performed by the focal firm and the
stakeholders in its ecosystem, as well as the mechanisms that orchestrate the
activities. Hereby an activity in the focal firm’s business model describes the
employment of human, physical, and capital resources of any stakeholder to the
business model (Zott & Amit, 2010). The notion of business model as a reflection
of realized strategy is useful to be studied as a system of activities because it
combines strategic choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Child, 1972) with
the interdependency consequences (Milgrom & Roberts, 1990, 1995) that result
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from them (Miller, 1981, 1992; Thompson, 1967). Even though the number of
scholars applying a business model lens is rather small, their research has gained
momentum because of its complexity-‐encompassing appeal, which proposes
implications for a broad range of management topics.
The majority of research, however, has taken a rather static view on
business models in past literature (DaSilva & Trkman, 2014; George & Bock, 2011;
Zott et al., 2011), discounting the fact that a business model may evolve over time,
be subject to change, and thus, should be depicted as a dynamic concept (Demil &
Lecocq, 2010; Morris et al., 2005; Sosna, Trevinyo-‐Rodríguez, & Velamuri, 2010;
Spieth et al., 2014). Far from being static, business models change and evolve over
time to remain sustainable and innovative. They need to be adjusted over time in
order to maintain viable, particularly in the context of changing environmental
conditions and constraints (Amit & Zott, 2012; Bucherer et al., 2012; McGrath,
2010). However, not all business models transform over time, some disappear or
become irrelevant. Business model dynamics in form of a process of change and
transformation may be triggered by internal or external circumstances to the firm
and the business model in place (Demil, Lecocq, Ricart, & Zott, 2015; DaSilva &
Trkman, 2014). Moreover, business model dynamics are proactive or reactive in
nature. Changes or transformations that are a proactive in nature are initiated and
introduced by the focal firm, while the changes and transformations that have a
reactive nature, arise as a response to the emergence of new circumstances that
can affect the functioning or effectiveness of the focal firm's business model (Vives
& Svejenova, 2011). Yet, in literature there is no clear definition of business model
change available (Bucherer, Eisert, & Gassmann, 2012; Spieth et al., 2014).
Further, rapidly changing ecosystems (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Zhu, 2013;
Teece, 2010) force firms to adapt to new conditions and transform their business
models in order to exploit new market opportunities. Environmental constraints
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not only hinder but also help novelty-‐centered business model design (Sanchez &
Ricart, 2010). The essence of novelty-‐centered business model design is the
adoption of new activities, new ways of linking activities, and/or new ways of
governing activities (Amit & Zott, 2014; Zott & Amit, 2010). Such development can
be game changing and centers on fundamentally shifting the rules of competition
in an ecosystem (Markides, 2008). Scholars acknowledge that firms do not employ
and execute their business models in a competitive vacuum but instead compete
through their business models (Amit & Zott, 2014; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart,
2010; Zott & Amit, 2007, 2008). Moreover, business models do not last forever.
Even the best-‐designed business models adapt to changes in the ecosystem in
order to keep pace with shifting customer needs, markets and competitive threats
(Linder & Cantrell, 2000) and to avoid becoming irrelevant and disappear.
From an evolutionary perspective (Nelson & Winter, 1982), the competitive
success of the focal firm depends ultimately on its ability to transform the entire
business model or the elements of its business model in rhythm with, and towards
a fit with its external business environment (Siggelkow, 2002a; Tripsas & Gavetti,
2000). Predicated on the conceptualization of the business model as the core logic
of how the firm creates and captures value, transformation of the business model
can be defined as the change in the perceived logic of how value is created and
captured by the corporation. As a consequence, a transformational approach is
required that regards the business model as a tool to handle organizational change
(Demil & Lecocq, 2010). However, past research often uses different terms, which
are used inconsistently and interchangeably in this context. For example, scholars
refer to business model innovation (Amit & Zott, 2012; Chesbrough, 2007a;
Cortimiglia, Ghezzi, & Frank, 2015), business model evolution (Bohnsack, Pinkse, &
Kolk, 2014; Demil & Lecocq, 2010; Doz & Kosonen, 2010), business model
development (Schneider & Spieth, 2013), or business model experimentation
(McGrath, 2010; Sosna, Trevinyo-‐Rodríguez, & Velamuri, 2010).
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While one stream of literature views business model innovation as the
introduction of a fundamentally different, game-‐changing business model to an
existing to an existing industry (Comes & Berniker, 2008; Markides, 2006; Snihur &
Zott, 2014), another stream of literature emphasizes that a continues process of
change that leads to business models, which are new to the firm, requires further
analysis instead (Bucherer et al., 2012; Schneider & Spieth, 2013). In this context,
Cavalcante and colleagues (2011) argue that not all organizational changes
necessarily imply changes in the business model as otherwise the business model
concept itself as a unit of analysis would be obsolete. Thus, this dissertation
defines business model transformation as a mean to allow the focal firm to attain
scale, raise the threshold of viability, as well as find new market space by enacting
its opportunity space through value creation and value capture with the goal to
adapt to an evolving ecosystem. In this line of thought, innovation and
internationalization of the business model represent two lenses of business model
dynamics that lead to and represent business model transformation. In this thesis,
I define them as the enablers of business model transformation. Moreover, in
contrast to Bucherer et al. (2012) who only consider deliberate changes in their
definition of business model transformation, in this thesis I follow the research
stream of Brea-‐Solís, Casadesus-‐Masanell and Grifell-‐Tatjé (2015) and Demil and
Lecocq (2010) who argue that business model choices and the consequent
changes in the business model can be both, intended and emerging.
In this line of thought, business model transformation can often be viewed
and interpreted as a process that is driven by experimentation and trial-‐and-‐error
learning (Khanagha, Volberda, & Oshri, 2014; McGrath, 2010; Sosna et al., 2010).
Experimenting with new business model designs and new activity systems requires
many different resources as implementing a new business model design is costly
and time-‐consuming for an organization (Bohnsack et al., 2014; Sosna et al., 2010).
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And process of change, transforming the business model is a complex and
activity (Mezger, 2014; Smith, Binns, & Tushman, 2010) requiring interdependent
choices and trade-‐offs (Porter, 1996; Siggelkow, 2001). In order to reduce the
complexity of business model transformation, managers often tend to make use of
prior experience and solutions they are familiar with (Gavetti & Levinthal, 2000;
Maitland & Sammartino, 2014). Such decision-‐making processes are most often
intangible and can trigger path dependency. Consequently, it is important to point
out that scholars often emphasize that path dependency of firms and cognitive
constraints of managers prevent organizations from transforming their established
business models that have been successful in the past and trap these firms in an
inappropriate or sub-‐optimal business model design (Chesbrough, 2010;
Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002).
With regard to the first enabler of business model transformation defined
and discussed in this thesis, namely business model innovation, it is important to
distinguish between innovation in the business model, in which case the business
model elements and their linking and governance are transformed with different
degrees of change (Vives & Svejenova, 2011; Amit & Zott, 2012), and innovation of
the business model, whereby the change leads to transformation of the overall
core logic of the focal firm (Markides, 2008; Vives & Svejenova, 2011). Business
model innovation – involving changes at the system level – can be implemented by
established and new firms alike (Amit & Zott, 2012). Because of the
interdependencies and interconnections of the activities of a business model,
changes in one or more design elements may entail further changes within the
business model and lead to changes in functionalities. Scholars agree that business
model innovation can be viewed as a new type of organizational innovation,
distinct from product, service, process or technological innovation (Markides,
2008; Zott et al., 2011), enabling firms to enact and realize opportunities for
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creating and capturing value whether they are discovered or created (Bock,
Opsahl, George, & Gann, 2012; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010).
Internationalization as the second enabler of business model transformation
refers to business model dynamics in terms of growth by expansion to new
geographic markets. In the case of addressing the location question, it is important
to account for the need to replicate and translate or adapt the existent business
model to new contexts, develop a new business model in new contexts (Lessard,
Lucea, & Vives, 2013; Slywotzky & Wise, 2009; Thompson & MacMillan, 2010;
Vives & Svejenova, 2009), or undertake reverse innovation (Immelt, Govindarajan,
& Trimble, 2009), in which innovative value propositions and delivery of value
propositions are created in emerging and developing countries, rather than
transferred and adapted from developed markets. For instance, firms from
emerging markets not only pursue different strategies in their international
expansion, but they do so with different core logic of how to operate in different
institutional environments. In light of their increasing global presence and
competitiveness with Western firms, the business model as a representation of
firms’ underlying strategic choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Shafer et
al., 2005) offers a particularly interesting insight into the context of emerging
market firms’ business model dynamics in terms of their internationalization to
emerging and developing countries but also to advanced economies.
Despite the remarkable growth of research on business models published in
recent years, there are fruitful avenues for further research in this area. The
preceding discussion reveals that questions about business model transformation
and dynamics as well as the fit to evolving ecosystems are of utter importance
considering the significant performance consequences of the business model
notion (Markides, 2006; Pohle & Chapman, 2006; Zott & Amit, 2007) and its
acknowledgement in research as a key source of competitive advantage (Baden-‐
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Fuller & Morgan, 2010; Björkdahl, 2009; Chesbrough, 2007a; Comes & Berniker,
2008; Hamel, 2000; McGrath, 2010; Mitchell & Coles, 2003; Teece, 2010;
Venkatraman & Henderson, 2008). Consequently, further attention is needed to
the ways in which business models transform over time in terms of business
model innovation and business model internationalization. The dynamics of
business models should be studied in a wider range of contexts that can highlight
peculiarities while at the same time allowing unraveling of commonalities, thus
enhancing the generalizability of findings (Svejenova et al., 2010).
Following this line of thought, this dissertation aims at extending research on
strategic renewal by introducing and defining the concept of business model
transformation through which new ventures and incumbents alike increase their
value creation and appropriation potential by realizing and enacting opportunities.
The purpose is to provide a fine-‐grained understanding of business model
transformation as the notion of fit adjustment in changing and evolving business
ecosystems and examine the underlying dynamics through the lenses of
innovation and internationalization of business models. As such, the concept of
business model transformation is taken as a common thread in this thesis.
1.2 Business Model as a Complement to Strategy
The extensive use of business models by practitioners since the 1990s
(Shafer et al., 2005) has increasingly drawn attention of strategic management
scholars. The business model was one of the great buzzwords of the Internet
boom. The reputation of business models has followed the rise and fall of Internet
start-‐ups, which did not need a strategy, a special competence or resources, or
even any customers, but all they needed was a web-‐based business model
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(Doganova & Eyquem-‐Renault, 2009; Magretta 2002). In an influential article,
Porter (2001, p. 73) criticized the business model as a “loose conception of how a
company does business and generates revenue” and lacks a shared and precise
definition in the strategic management literature (Alt & Zimmermann 2001). In
response to such criticism, scholars have attempted to stabilize the business
model concept by invoking a definition thereof and establish the notion of
business models as a complement to strategy.
Scholars in the strategic management field are fundamentally concerned
with explaining differential firm performance (Hitt, Ireland, Camp, & Sexton, 2001;
Rumelt, Schendel, & Teece, 1991;). In the search for sources of competitive
advantage, two prominent strategic management theory streams have emerged:
(1) the industry structure view, and (2) the resource-‐based view. The first theory
stream – the industry structure view (Brandenburger & Nalebuff, 1996; Porter,
1980) – suggests that competitive advantage and supernormal returns are a
function of the focal firm’s membership in an industry with favorable structural
characteristics, thereby proposing the industry as unit of analysis. The second
theory stream – the resource-‐based view of the firm (Barney, 1991; Wernerfelt,
1984) – argues that differential firm performance and competitive advantage are
fundamentally due to the focal firm’s heterogeneity and its ability to accumulate
resources and capabilities that are rare, valuable, non-‐substitutable, and difficult
to imitate rather than industry structure, thereby introducing the firm as the
primary unit of analysis.
Although these two perspectives in strategic management have contributed
to the understanding of how firms achieve above-‐normal returns, they do not
make sufficiently allowance for the important fact that the advantages and
disadvantages of a firm, and thus its ability to create value and capture part of that
value created, are often linked to how the firm conducts its business. Thus, in this
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thesis I argue and join the conversation that business models are complementary
to strategy in allowing firms to be competitive (Zott & Amit, 2008) and facilitate
strategic transformation (Anderson & Markides, 2007; Lehmann-‐Ortega &
Schoettl, 2005). Business models, as a system, describe how the pieces of a
business fit together (Magretta, 2002), but they do not factor in competition as
one critical dimension of performance. Competitive strategy, in turn, explains how
the focal firm will do better than rivals. It explains how a firm will do better by
being different (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Magretta, 2002).
The distinction between business model and strategy is more than one of
semantics; these are two different but complementary concepts that need to be
distinguished (Yip, 2004). The business model thus addresses the ‘how’ of
providing customers and end-‐users with product and service offerings. It refers to
the nature of the offerings that the firm provides to customers, the way it deploys
resources, and the activities that it performs to deliver those offerings
(Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Magretta, 2002; Mitchell & Coles, 2003, 2004;
Richardson, 2008; Santos, Spector, & Van der Heyden, 2009; Zott & Amit, 2010).
While the traditional strategy frameworks such as the industry structure view
(Brandenburger & Nalebuff, 1996; Porter, 1980) and the resource-‐based view
(Barney, 1991; Wernerfelt, 1984) focus on the competitive advantage of firms, and
hence on value appropriation, the complementary approach with the business
model as unit of analysis is concerned with total value creation.
Value creation is at the heart of the strategic management field as it is an
essential prerequisite for value appropriation (Brandenburger & Stuart, 1996;
Porter, 1985). The business model communicates the firm’s value creation and
value appropriation logic (Amit & Zott, 2001; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010;
Casadesus-‐Masanell & Zhu, 2013; Chesbrough, 2007a; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom,
2002; Magretta, 2002; Mahadevan, 2000; Malone, Weill, Lai, D’Urso, Herman,
11 | Page
Apel, & Woerner, 2006; Morris, Schindehutte, Richardson, & Allen, 2006;
Richardson, 2008; Santos et al. 2009; Zott & Amit 2007), the core logic of the firm
and how it operates (Baden-‐Fuller, MacMillan, Demil, & Lecocq, 2010; Shafer et
al., 2005), as well as the focal firm’s objective of continuous strategic renewal
(Volberda, Baden-‐Fuller, & van den Bosch, 2001). As such, the business model also
co-‐determines the focal firm’s bargaining power. Thus, the greater the total value
created and the greater the focal firm’s bargaining power, the greater the amount
of value that the focal firm can appropriate (Zott & Amit, 2007).
The business model is also conceptually distinct from organizational
structure (Zott & Amit, 2007) and from product-‐market positioning strategy (Zott
& Amit, 2008), although it must be considered a fundamental complement to a
firm’s overall strategy. It defines how the focal firm is embedded in its business
ecosystem (Adner & Kapoor, 2010); that is, in the multiple layers and networks of
firms, institutions, customers, and other stakeholders that surround it, thereby
determining not only possible partners that can help co-‐create value but also
competitors. As such, the business model determines the focal firm’s cooperative
and competitive landscape. Consequently, the business model is one of the most
fundamental strategic choices that firms need to make, in addition to deciding,
which market needs in which specific customer segments to address, in which
geographic markets to compete, how and when to enter these markets, and on
the basis of which resources and capabilities (Amit & Zott, 2014).
Besides these mostly static perspectives on the business model, a few
scholars have begun to acknowledge its dynamic aspects. A focus on the business
model as an activity system – a “system that is made up of components, linkages
among the components, and dynamics” (Afuah & Tucci, 2001: 4) – already implies
that dynamics play an important role for the value creation and value capture
potential of business models enabled by the activities. Casadesus-‐Masanell and
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Ricart (2010) describe the virtuous cycles that certain choices and fit among the
choices within a business model engender. As a reflection of realized strategy, the
business model sets the stage for the tactical choices that a firm might make in
order to compete (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Zhu,
2013), also referred to as routine strategies that are determined by the choice of
business model but that do not change the underlying activity system (Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Yip, 2004). Thus, the business model is to be seen as a
complement, not substitute, to strategy (Zott & Amit, 2008), which further
emphasizes the importance of concept and the underlying dynamics.
1.3 Research Motivation, Objective, and Structure
Advancing on the introduction to this thesis, it becomes evident that
research on business models is a growing and influential literature stream. The
rapidly changing competitive landscape challenges firms to become more
innovative. Instead of falling prey to ever-‐changing market forces, some firms
show great agility and strategic renewal as they relentlessly change and transform
their business models in terms of innovation and internationalization. Driven by a
continuous quest for opportunities that put their activities and resources to better
and more profitable use and allow them to create and capture more value, firms
frequently and consistently introduce new value propositions, new ways of value
delivery, and new ways of value appropriation. Firms’ orchestration of activities
within their activity systems and transformation of their business models through
innovation and internationalization to realize opportunities with the objective to
increase value creation and capture is the topic of this dissertation.
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Studying business model dynamics allows the examination of firm-‐level
business model transformation by applying an activity-‐system perspective that
views the business model as a complement to strategy and focuses on firms’
orchestration of their activities to realize opportunities. Opportunity realization
requires firms to collectively integrate their strategic resources and capabilities to
transform them into activities. Successful realization of opportunities is not about
individual activities constituting parts of different functional areas but rather their
orchestration, reconfiguration and specifically their interdependencies, which link
diverse activities and spur new opportunities. Thus, this dissertation brings
forward a focus on firms’ activities and their interdependencies, which depart
from strategy literature that focuses on organizations and strategy as complex
systems of interdependent choices (Milgrom & Roberts, 1995; Siggelkow, 2011;
Thompson, 1967), unique set of activity choices and high levels of fit among them
(Porter, 1996), whereby the degree of fit is a function of the underlying
interdependencies among a firm’s activities (Miller, 1981; Thompson, 1967).
Research is limited in encompassing all choices a firm can make and whether and
to what extent these choices are interdependent. Activity systems are appealing
because of their complexity-‐encompassing implications for research on business
models. It remains difficult to delineate business model research from other areas
due to its broad implications.
While research on agile small and medium enterprises (SMEs), start-‐ups, and
large multinationals that combine innovative business models with technological
innovation in fast-‐moving, highly competitive ecosystems (Amit & Zott, 2012; Zott
& Amit, 2007, 2008, 2010), internet-‐based companies (Cusumano, 2008; Lumpkin
& Dess, 2004; Rindova & Kotha, 2001; Mahadevan, 2000), ventures fulfilling needs
at the bottom of the pyramid in developing countries (Anderson & Markides,
2007; Meyer & Thu Tran, 2006; Prahalad, 2006; Seelos & Mair, 2007), as well as in
other contexts, such as healthcare (Hwang & Christensen, 2008), biotechnology
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(Durand, Bruyaka, & Mangematin, 2008; Fisken & Rutherford, 2002; Mangematin,
Lemarie, Boissin, Catherine, Corolleur, Coronini, & Trommetter, 2003; Willemstein,
Van der Valk, & Meeus, 2007), open source communities (Dahlander &
Magnusson, 2008), and servitization (Eggert, Hogreve, Ulaga, & Muenkhoff, 2014;
Gebauer & Friedli, 2005; Kastalli & van Looy, 2013; Kastalli, van Looy, & Neely,
2013; Kowalkowski, Windahl, Kindström, & Gebauer, 2015) enriched our
understanding of the value creation and capture potential of business models, our
understanding of how business models are transformed over time and how they
travel across borders remains scarce (Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Zott &
Amit, 2007, 2008).
The ambiguous understanding of dynamics and evolution of business models
that extant literature currently provides is partly due to its inherent complexity.
Extant literature on business models explains at its heart that the actual choices
made by the firm and the resulting interdependency pattern among them are
important to understand the performance differences among firms and their
future ability to undergo strategic renewal (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010).
The re-‐organization of activities is particularly relevant because “changing the
scope of the organization not only affects the extent to which it can capture the
fruits of its innovative labor; but also the extent to which it can be innovative in
the future” (Jacobides, Knudsen & Augier, 2006, p: 1201). Yet, we know little how
the notion of business model transformation relates to the occurring
interdependency patterns. We need to understand better how the fit adjustment
is operationalized through the lenses of innovation and internationalization of
business models.
More research is needed to better understand how firms transform their
business models to realize their opportunity space. In this dissertation, I define
business model transformation as a mean to allow the focal firm to attain scale,
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raise the threshold of viability, as well as find new market space by realizing its
opportunity space and increase its value creation and value capture potential with
the goal to adapt to an evolving ecosystem, enabled by business model innovation
and business model internationalization. Realization of business opportunities is
defined here as a firm’s exploitation and exploration of internal and external
activities and resources within the business model to continuously pursue value
creation and value capture. Studying business model transformation through the
notion of business model dynamics allows the examination of strategy at the
intersection to innovation and internationalization.
This dissertation seeks to enhance our understanding of the transformation
and its underlying dynamics enabled through business model innovation and
growth of business models through internationalization. I respond to the request
for more research to better understand how the lenses of business model
innovation and internationalization enhance and nourish value creation and value
capture. The ideas presented in this thesis are anchored in my research program
on business model transformation, consisting currently of seven articles, out of
which three main overall essays constitute the principal chapters of this thesis,
providing unique contributions to the field. Taken together these three essays in
this thesis constitute an integrated contribution, which is presented in the
developed final integrative framework on business model transformation in
chapter 5. The three following chapters of this thesis examine first the theorizing
on the business model concept in extent literature in chapter 2, and the
subsequent research and theory building on the business model transformation
enablers of business model innovation in the context of the German dental
industry in chapter 3 and business model internationalization in the context of
emerging market multinationals in chapter 4. Figure 1.1 “Structure of dissertation
portfolio” presents the structure and overview of the thesis at hand and the
complete PhD research program.
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The three essays presented in this thesis constitute the theory building part
of my overall PhD research program. Here, I intend to contribute to the theorizing
and conceptualization of the business model, the constituting elements and
relationships among them, which allows me to revisit and enrich existing findings
as well as outline future directions to build upon. The first essay sets the stage for
the subsequent research portfolio that follows. The second essay focuses on
business model innovation of dental practices in Germany. Here, I build grounded
theory on the antecedents of business model innovation on the firm-‐level and
develop a framework for further testing in subsequent empirical research based
on 134 cases and ten in-‐depth case studies. The third essay elaborates on critical
literature review on the internationalization trajectories of emerging markets
multinationals and builds theory and develops a conceptual framework about the
different business model management and innovation strategies of firms from
emerging markets illustrated by eight case studies. The presented propositions
and framework are designed for further testing in subsequent future empirical
research. In the fifth chapter I integrate the findings and contributions of the
respective chapters and essays, and based on my preceding research I propose a
conceptual framework of business model transformation.
This thesis is structured as follows. Research questions that structure this
thesis and led the research are introduced, common themes are highlighted that
emerged from studying business model transformation and the underlying
dynamics in various contexts and a brief overview of the essays that comprise this
thesis are presented in the remainder of this chapter. The subsequent three
chapters of the thesis present the three essays, followed by a presentation of the
final conceptual framework of business model transformation in chapter 5,
integrating the preceding research, its outcomes and contributions. This final
chapter discusses the overall theoretical and managerial implications of the
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dissertation, emphasizes its contributions, outlines the limitations, and presents
the avenues for future research.
Figure 1.1: Structure of dissertation portfolio
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1.4 Introduction of Research Questions
The above discussion points to business model transformation with the
underlying dynamics being a fascinating and still not well-‐explored phenomenon
worth investigating in more depth for strategy scholars interested in the drivers of
growth and firm performance. Following up on these motivations, the general
question this dissertation aims to answer to complement the burgeoning research
in this area is:
• What is the nature of business model transformation in
evolving business ecosystems?
A conceptual model of business model transformation is developed and
presented in Chapter 5. As business model transformation is a highly complex
phenomenon, this research has focused by de-‐structuring the phenomenon under
scrutiny into different research questions addressed in subsequent chapters in this
thesis. In the first theoretical part of the thesis, Chapter 1, I try to clarify the
current dilemmas around the notion of the business model and the development
of business model transformation in extant literature. From the theoretical
discussion I conclude that, in order to further understand the dynamics of business
models, we have to look into the lenses and mechanisms that constitute them.
The following discussion offers a recapitulation of the research questions
discussed in each chapter of the dissertation.
The first essay is a conceptual piece setting the stage and considering the
nature of the business model concept. Analyzing the business model concept in
depth is crucial for the subsequent understanding of the development of business
model dynamics. The purpose of this essay is to contribute to greater clarity and
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understanding of the business model concept by distinguishing different
definitions and conceptualizations in received literature and indicating ways in
which researchers can use its insights. Thus, I first critically review the extant
literature on business models to identify different perspectives that constitute the
current views on what the business model is, and what the business model is not,
and conceptualize different types of constituting elements and basic relationships
between them. Each of these elements caters to different dynamics and purposes.
Together they explain how dynamics of the business model come about and
thereby help explain how business model transformation contributes to value
creation and value capture. Theorizing about the different perspectives on the
business model notion allows me to revisit and enrich existing findings as well as
outline future directions to build upon. Thus, the research questions I ask in the
second part of the thesis, chapter 2, are the following:
• What is the business model?
• How does the business model explain value creation and value
capture?
Due to the great complexity of the business model and the underlying
dynamics, I propose studying each lens of business model transformation through
a set of research questions and differentiating the various business model dynamic
approaches. In the second essay, therefore, I extend the theoretical milestones of
business model transformation through the examination of business model
innovation antecedents on the firm-‐level and adaptation trajectories of complex
service providers in the context of the evolving and challenging ecosystems of the
German dental care industry. Against this background, I build grounded theory of
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business model antecedents on the firm-‐level and ask the following research
questions:
• What are the antecedents that enable the service providers to
engage in business model innovation?
• How do the service providers adapt their business models to
an evolving ecosystem?
The third essay contributes to the growing stream of research on the
phenomenal surge in internationalization by firms from emerging markets. Here, I
extend the theoretical milestones of business model transformation through the
examination of business model internationalization in the context of
internationalization trajectories of firms from emerging markets. Following a
critical literature review on internationalization of emerging market firms, I
develop a conceptual framework and illustrate it with eight case studies with the
aim to answer the following research questions:
• How do EMNEs manage their business models when they
internationalize?
• How do EMNEs innovate their business models when they
internationalize?
Although the dissertation runs across different contexts, it advances a
common focus on the notion of business model transformation and the underlying
dynamics and its manifestation and role in each setting. I propose that the notion
of business model transformation is important for the continuous pursuit and
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realization of opportunities with the objective to continuously improve and
increase value creation and value capture. This will become evident in subsequent
chapters that address this issue through a focus on the research questions
presented above and shown in Figure 1.2. To answer these questions I examined
various existing theories and perspectives prevalent in the strategic management
research as well as observed the phenomenon directly in distinct contexts to see
what I could learn about it first hand.
Figure 1.2: Research questions of respective chapters
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1.5 Overview of the Essays and their Contributions
This thesis presents and discusses three essays out of my PhD dissertation
research portfolio that provide unique contributions to the research field on
dynamics of business model transformation. Taken together these essays
constitute an integrated contribution. This dissertation pays close attention to the
context in which business model transformation unfolds and its underlying
business model dynamics, which is reflected in the diversity of firms, their contexts
and the ecosystems they are embedded in, studied across several chapters. These
firms and contexts include small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in terms of
dental practices in Germany (Essay 2) and emerging markets multinationals
(EMNEs) across different markets such as India, China, Brazil, Mexico and Turkey
(Essay 3). This represents an attempt to highlight the contingent nature of
business model transformation and how it allows firms to increase value creation
and value capture through the realization of business opportunities. To set the
stage for the research on business model transformation, I considered it crucial to
establish a common understanding of the nature of the business model concept.
Thus, Essay 1 presents the initial discussion on theorizing and conceptualization of
the notion of business models. In the following I will present a brief introduction
to the three essays, the overall contribution as well as the structure of this thesis.
In the first essay, I critically review the existing literature on business
models, as prior research has been contradictory about the role of the business
model and the position of the concept in literature. Thus, the first essay
demonstrates the importance of the notion of business models as the core logic of
the firm in value creation and value capture. It provides the conceptualization,
terminology and general relationships among different perspectives on the notion
of business models and identifies the two dominating views that dominate extant
research on business models. Each of these identified perspectives and the two
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dominating views cater to different dynamics and purposes. Together they explain
how interdependency between business model elements and the resulting
conceptualizations come about and thereby help to explain competitive
advantage, strategic renewal, and the evolution of the firm. Theorizing about the
different perspectives, the determinants of the driving views, and the constituting
elements and relationships among them allows me to revisit and enrich existing
findings as well as outline future directions to build upon. Hence, the first essay’s
main contribution is to provide an overview of different conceptualizations and
their sources as well as a consistent terminology of elements and their
relationship with key concepts of strategic management. The first essay sets thus
the stage for further research on business model transformation.
The second and third essay elaborate on business model transformation by
diving deeper into the role of the underlying dynamics of innovation and growth
through internationalization respectively. The second essay, illustrates the
importance of integrating innovation in business model transformation with the
objective to realize value innovation by identifying four firm-‐level antecedents of
business model innovation in the dental industry in Germany. That is, based on
grounded theory building and by applying a modularity perspective on business
models, a theoretical framework of business model innovation is developed in
order to answer how the identified antecedents on the firm-‐level, namely
specialization, concentration, goal to value capture and external constraints, drive
business model innovation and lead to value innovation as the outcome with the
objective to adapt the business model to an evolving ecosystem. This second essay
contributes to the overall research on business model transformation by taking
place at the intersection of business model innovation and ecosystem evolution.
The identification of antecedents of business model innovation suggest a
shift in perspective in research as it extends the locus of innovation antecedents
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from individual insights in innovation research (Beckman, 2006; Hargadon &
Sutton, 1997; Ruef, 2002; Sinhur & Zott, 2014) to the consideration of firm-‐level
antecedents of business model innovation. The focus on business model
innovation as a lens of business model transformation emphasizes firms’
orchestration of internal and external activities to enact opportunities of value
creation and appropriation, whether they are discovered or created, in order to
adapt to the evolving ecosystem. It further allows me to enhance strategy
literature by pointing out the relevance of value innovation as a competitive
trajectory of business model transformation. The context of dental service
providers in Germany allows me to contribute to institutional theory by presenting
the identified antecedents of business model innovation as a mechanism leading
to an institutional change in the ecosystem of service providers.
Meanwhile, the third essay analyzes the internationalization trajectories of
multinationals from emerging markets, offering useful insights into how the
integration of the dimension of growth through internationalization in business
model transformation allows us to understand how these emerging markets firms
make sense of exploitation and exploration of ownership advantages through their
business model management strategies. In the third essay, a theoretical model is
developed in order to answer when leveraging of the traditional business model
from home and when the development of a new business model inhibits and
when it enables opportunity realization through internationalization. Prior
literature has been contradictory about the role of internationalization of
emerging markets multinationals. One line of argumentation suggests that
exploitation of ownership advantages inhibits an emerging multinational from
successful expansion to new markets and will require the exploration of new
advantages instead, which implies the development of a new business model.
25 | Page
A second strand of argumentation contends that exploration of ownership
advantages allow for successful internationalization and conflicts that can lead to
novel solutions, which implies the leverage of the traditional business model and
the consequent business model innovation. In this essay, these two perspectives
are brought together and looked at in an integrated way. A multidimensional
reconceptualization of internationalization strategies of emerging market
multinationals into the level of institutional difference in terms of entry into
emerging or developed markets, and strategic initiatives in terms of leveraging the
traditional business model or developing new business model allows reconciling
both lines of argumentation. The developed theoretical framework is illustrated by
eight case studies of emerging multinationals. The main contribution of this essay
is to argue theoretically that both, leveraging of the traditional business model
and the development of new business model can enable and inhibit successful
transformation through internationalization depending on the business model
management strategy in place.
The interdependency of activities in the activity system of the business
model as a core element of business model transformation is a common thread
across the different contexts of complex service providers in Germany as
presented in the second essay and emerging market multinationals in various
markets in the third essay. In all these instances, variability across different
dimensions of business model transformation is observed, calling for integration
that reconciles tension from opportunities. The diversity of the settings explored
and theories used makes it possible to draw connections across contexts,
highlighting the relevance of theoretical robustness of the proposed business
model transformation concept.
A recurring theme across the different contexts explored in this research is
business model transformation as firms strive to attain a balance among
26 | Page
competing demands while they pursue different opportunities. This observation
underscores the importance of looking at firms’ value creation and capture ability
from a business model perspective. Business model transformation enablers of
business model innovation and business model internationalization, reflecting
broad categories of actions, are extended across different organizational types and
contexts, revealing the importance of integration of these lenses and their
embodied dynamics. Integration of the lenses of innovation and
internationalization reflects the valuable role of business model transformation in
attending to contradicting demands to collectively orchestrate the dynamics of
business model transformation and smooth firms’ actions in pursuit of
opportunities to increase their value creation and value capture potential.
As a result, all three essays presented in the following chapters show a clear
attempt to link business model transformation to the broader strategic and
organization context where it transpires. This is done through incorporating
relevant theoretical dimensions that help explain business model transformation
through the firms’ realization of innovation and internationalization of their
business models to enact opportunities with the objective to increase value
creation and value capture in evolving ecosystems. Transformation of the business
model allows firms to attain scale and raise the threshold of viability, as well as
find new market space. In this line of thought, innovation and internationalization
of the business model represent two lenses of business model dynamics that lead
to and represent business model transformation.
Consequently, advancing on the three essays, in chapter 5, I integrate the
findings and contributions of the essays respectively, and based on the preceding
research I propose a conceptual framework of business model transformation. The
proposed framework integrates the lenses of business model innovation and
business model internationalization. The in the research identified business model
27 | Page
innovation antecedents as well as the strategies to grow the business model
through internationalization represent the five constraints of the opportunity
space of business model transformation, which is defined as being passed through
to collaborative agency.
Taken together, business model transformation is a multi-‐dimensional
construct, which resides in a focal firm’s strategic choices. However, the business
model transformation design is not purely given by nature but to some extent at
the discretion of the firm. This thesis suggests that business model transformation
is to some extent a choice by itself, for example, through organizational policies
that determine whether a set of activities is supposed to interact or not as
discussed in both essays two and three respectively. By taking several decisions
that influence the interdependency design of the business model, firms can set the
right context for system-‐induced recombination of activities as a source of
continuous business model transformation.
1.6 Introduction to Research Methodology
This section offers an introduction to the methodological approach of this
thesis. In light of the premises of critical realism, this research proposes a multi-‐
method research design consisting of both quantitative and qualitative research
methods. While the empirical study is characterized as being primarily qualitative
based on different case studies in different context and an in-‐depth grounded
theory development, however, quantitative tools are also applied to analyze and
test the results of the case comparisons in the empirical research where large
amounts of data were gathered. The notion of business model transformation is
being studied through different lenses of dynamics in each chapter of this
28 | Page
dissertation, such as business model innovation and business model
internationalization. Therefore, the most adequate methodology is applied in
different parts of the research, looking at their internal validity but also gathering
as much information to achieve the set objective to understand the notion of
business model transformation and its influence on value creation and value
capture. Each chapter describes the methodology applied for the particular
research included in that chapter. The aim of this introduction, then, is to provide
a common understanding of the epistemological approach to the research.
This thesis looks at the internal determinants of the business model
transformation embedded in the focal firms’ strategic management. As argued
above, various scholars have looked before into the phenomenon of value
creation and value capture through business models (Amit & Zott, 2001; Baden-‐
Fuller et al., 2010; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom,
2002; Magretta, 2002; Mahadevan, 2000; Morris et al., 2006; Santos et al., 2009;
Shafer et al., 2005; Svejenova et al., 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010). This research can be
considered a new phenomenon, as practitioners and academics have only recently
started to reflect on it; however, some theoretical background has already been
developed which is used to guide the present research. Therefore, the approach of
this study is semi-‐constructivist based on observing the focal firms’ constructions
of reality but based on some already defined theoretical constructs and
frameworks of analysis provided by the scholars cited above. In a positivistic
approach, I assume the existence of the organization and resources. This
methodological approach favors interpretative methods of enquiry such as
grounded theory and case studies.
Because the revision of organizational interpretative schemes that relate to
business model transformation and its underlying dynamics, even when looked at
through its lenses of business model innovation and business models
29 | Page
internationalization, is typically a subtle and evolving process, traditional survey
methods and quantitative analyses are less possible during the first phase of this
research and when building new theories, as presented above in the structure of
this dissertation portfolio. As such, research designed to investigate more
interpretative schemes must be as little intrusive as possible and it must be
longitudinal and capable of tracing unfolding changes (Fredrickson, 1983; Gioia &
Chittipeddi, 1991; Mintzberg, 1979; Whyte, 1943). No single method can
comprehend all of the subtle variations in ongoing human experience (Denzin &
Lincoln, 2000). Consequently, researchers deploy a wide range of interconnected
interpretative methods, always seeking better ways to make the worlds of
experience they study more understandable.
Strategic management research, for instance, allows us to look at the ways
in which management organizes and represents certain kinds of meanings, like
business model transformation. Critical theory allows us to look at the notion of
business model transformation through its lenses of business model innovation
and internationalization and the diverse definitions related to the research topic. It
allows us to create new concepts, and look at new emerging and old established
business models and the way they evolve, change and move across borders with
our critical theorist’s hat on. It allows us to look at the problematic issues of
business model dynamics, innovation and internationalization, and the underlying
mechanisms of value creation and value capture. Other traditions such as
hermeneutics and positivism, particularly in the second part of the PhD research
program and my future research, which does not constitute part of this thesis,
have further influenced my epistemological position.
The research methods selected to analyze the phenomenon of business
model transformation are the case study method, grounded theory, and
theoretical analysis in this thesis, followed by a mixed methods methodology in
30 | Page
the second part of my research, which does not constitute an explicit part of this
presented thesis but whose results do contribute substantially to the overall
outcome and the overall contribution of this dissertation endeavor. To analyze the
data of business model innovation and business model internationalization, I
primarily apply a thematic analysis, which is recognized as an adequate method to
look for replicable themes that describe types of behavior (Boyatzis, 1998; Denzin
& Lincoln, 2000; Miles & Huberman, 1994; Patton, 2002).
The process of theory building is inspired and driven mainly by Glaser and
Strauss’ (1967) methodology of grounded theory, involving the construction of
theory through the analysis of data, and on Eisenhardt’s roadmap on building
theory through case studies (Eisenhardt, 1989). In this research, I stress the
importance of validity and reliability in the design of the underlying case study
research (Yin, 1981, 1984). It is further based on the following states grounded on
Lewis’ theory building roadmap (Lewis & Grimes, 1999) but also inspired by
scholars such as Weick, for explanations on how to build a problem statement and
independent conjectures (Weick, 1989). Theory building requires rich description,
the richness that comes from anecdotes (Mintzberg, 1979). The data collection
methods used in my research vary from in-‐depth interviews to secondary, archival
data from the firms observed, their websites, company reports, and my active
participation in corporate meetings of the focal firms.
1.7 Theory Development form Different Traditions
Despite growing use of the concept, business model research is still in its
early stages. This thesis looks at the introduction of business model premises in
the theory of the firm and strategic management. It pretends to jointly study two
31 | Page
distinct fields: strategic management, mainly through activity system, strategic
renewal and fit theories, and the notion of business models, in particular using the
dynamics approach. These two main fields of strategy and business models are
further supported by three additional distinct fields, namely organization theory,
innovation, and internationalization in the specific context of emerging market
multinationals, which are reflected in the three main essays that represent the
three chapters of this thesis, specifically as the research of the notion of business
models, and the enablers of business model transformation interpreted as
business model innovation and business model internationalization respectively.
Differences in paradigms and languages have determined not only the way
scientific communities understand the phenomenon of business models but also
the way practitioners apply their tools and solve the day-‐to-‐day problems in
business model design, management, and change and in strategic management.
The joint study of business models and strategic management is an effort to learn
from both fields, which have not been developed to the same extent in terms of
their analytical content (Amit & Zott, 2001; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010;
George & Bock, 2011; Spieth et al., 2014) and never fully reconciled (Porter, 2001).
The goal of identifying a business model and strategy theory paradigm, although
important, does not undermine the importance of this study of the field. On the
contrary, the aim of studying the notion of business models in conjunction or
contextualized by strategy management theories creates a need to develop joint
theories that clarify the existing complementary and competing constructs.
In this research on business model transformation, I refer to different
theories in the fields of business models, strategic management, innovation,
internationalization, strategic renewal, emerging market multinationals and
institutional theories to interpret my observations. I look at how the phenomenon
in question can legitimately be subject to various theories yet remaining a related
32 | Page
class phenomenon. Moreover, in this thesis, I propose different frameworks
integrating the study of the phenomenon of business models, thereby embedding
the notion of business model in the innovation process and internationalization
trajectories of emerging market firms respectively without losing the
particularities of the business model concept while primarily applying the strategic
management theory as guidance. The integrating frameworks are the results of
combining current strategic management and business model theories in a dialog,
enhancing them with the innovation and internationalization theories, and
supported by institutional theories. Together, the theories help to better
understand the notion of business model transformation despite having different
theoretical assumptions regarding corporate objectives and the importance
different aspects have in defining firm behavior.
33 | Page
Chapter 2: Multi-‐Perspective View on Value Creation
and Value Capture through Business
Models: A Review and Research Agenda
This paper provides a broad review of extant literature on business models
in which the authors examine the sources of differences, commonalities, shared
dimensions, antecedents and levels of analysis of the concept through multilevel
lenses. With the objective to shed light on the ambiguity in research, the authors
identify three existent perspectives on business model research permanent in
received literature – strategic perspective, organizational perspective, and
normative perspective – and outline how these perspectives reveal value creation
34 | Page
and appropriation mechanisms. The authors conclude with fruitful avenues for
future research, which could serve as a catalyst for a more unified study of
business models independent of the phenomena or context at hand.
2.1 Introduction
In recent years, business models not only have been the focus of substantial
attention from practitioners, but they have gained momentum in academic
research and became the subject of extensive conceptualization and empirical
research. Business models have been integral to trading and economic behavior
since pre-‐classical times (Teece, 2010). Introduced by Peter Drucker in 1954
(Drucker, 1954), the business model concept became common with the advent of
the Internet in the mid 1990s (Magretta, 2002). The business model addresses the
‘how’ of providing customers and stakeholders with offerings. In its broadest
sense it is found to communicate the core logic of the firm and how it operates,
constitute the firm’s architectural backbone (Shafer, Smith, & Linder, 2005), and
act as critical construct for understanding the firm’s value creation and
appropriation (Amit & Zott, 2001; Baden-‐Fuller, MacMillan, Demil, & Lecocq, 2010;
Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Magretta,
2002; Mahadevan, 2000; Morris, Schindehutte, Richardson, & Allen, 2006; Santos,
Spector, & Van der Heyden, 2009; Shafer et al., 2005; Svejenova, Planellas, &
Vives, 2010). The various conceptualizations of the business model in received
literature imply that choosing a particular business model means choosing a
particular way to compete, a particular logic of the firm (Casadesus-‐Masanell &
Zhu, 2013). Business models provide means to describe and classify businesses,
and to operate as sites for empirical research, thereby pending between the real
35 | Page
world consisting of many firms that behave and are organized in different ways,
and theories of the firm behavior that tend to be very general (Baden-‐Fuller &
Morgan, 2010).
Scholars of business models emphasize the holistic approach of the concept
in explaining how firms operate, they share the view of the concept as new
emerging unit of analysis, and they agree that activities, resources and their
organization play a crucial role in diverse conceptualizations that are being
proposed in received literature (George & Bock, 2011; Zott et al., 2011). However,
despite growing use of the concept, little convergence has emerged in the
definitions, in large part, due to the breadth of scholarly communities studying the
concept with different meanings and applying the terminology of business models
to different domains (Morris et al., 2005). Consequently, literature on business
models is developing largely in silos, according to the phenomena of interest of
the respective scholars (Gioia & Pitre, 1990; Zott et al., 2011). Moreover, as the
business model concept stems from managerial practice, scholars often fail to
explicitly clarify the theoretical underpinnings of the concept (George & Bock
2011; Schneider & Spieth 2013). It is apparent that scholars need a common
understanding of the multiple facets of the business model construct and a
common language to draw effectively on the proposed research.
This variation and lack of consensus have created a conceptual pluralism
that has uncovered novel ways to explain what business models are and how they
work. Moreover, the conceptual pluralism reveals two impediments to research
on business models: on the one hand, it is over-‐abstraction, driven by too broad
definitions of the concept, and on the other hand, it is conceptual ambiguity,
which occurs when researchers use different labels to describe the same business
model construct or the same labels to describe different constructs. Over-‐
abstraction and conceptual ambiguity create compartmentalization of definitions
36 | Page
that do not enrich each other and produce isolated lines of research (Gioia & Pitre,
1990). These challenges substantiate the need for structured and rigorous
research to achieve stronger convergence in definitions and better understanding
of the business model concept (George & Bock, 2011; Santos et al., 2009;
Schweizer, 2005; Shafer et al., 2005; Svejenova et al., 2010; Zott et al., 2011).
The purpose of this paper is to contribute to greater clarity and
understanding of the business model concept by distinguishing different
definitions and conceptualizations in received literature and indicating ways in
which researchers can use its insights. The structure of the paper is as follows.
First, we review extant literature and present an overview of the state-‐of-‐the-‐art
in the research addressing business models. We reveal sources of differences but
also commonalities and shared dimensions in the various business model
definitions that act as a catalyst toward more convergence in the research of
business models. Second, based on the in-‐depth literature review, we identify
three perspectives on business models that seem to prevail in extant research: (1)
the strategic perspective that views the business model as an abstraction of
strategy and focuses on the business model as the dynamic interplay of strategic
choices a firm makes and the consequences that arise from the choices with the
focus on better understanding the mechanisms of value appropriation; (2) the
organizational perspective that views the business model as an activity system, a
bundle of resources and interdependent activities that transcend the focal firm
and span its boundaries thereby emphasizing value creation; and (3) the
normative perspective that acts a guideline on what components constitute the
business model and how these building blocks should be organized with value
capture as the main concern.
Although viewed from different perspectives, the business model concept is
recognized as a crucial source of value creation and appropriation for the firm
37 | Page
(Amit & Zott, 2001; Anderson & Markides, 2007; Chesbrough, 2010; Johnson,
Christensen, & Kagermann, 2008; Mitchell & Coles, 2003, 2004; Svejenova et al.,
2010; Teece, 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010). Thus, third, we advance the conceptual
framework and explore how the three identified perspectives conceptualize value
creation, appropriation and capture as the core logic of the business model. The
paper concludes with fruitful avenues to be pursued in future research to further
advance our understanding of the business models concept.
2.2 Multi-‐Level Review of the Business Model Concept
To conduct this critical multi-‐level literature review we followed a multi-‐step
process. First, we used the EBSCO Business Source Complete database as a starting
point (Certo, Holcomb, & Holmes, 2009; Laplume, Sonpar, & Litz, 2008). We
searched the database using the terms “business model” or “business models”
only in the title, abstract, or keywords as the term has often been used non-‐
specifically in various contexts. Hereby we focused on academic articles published
from 1st January 1954 till 31st December 2009 in peer-‐reviewed journals. As a
result of this search we obtained 6,302 articles as an initial sample. An initial
cursory analysis performed by reading the titles, abstracts and journal names
eliminated articles that would not be useful for this review, as the business model
concept did not seem to represent the subject of analysis. Consequently, in order
to focus stronger on the business model concept as the subject of analysis, in the
consequent step the research has been narrowed down to only those articles that
include the term “business model” in the their title. As a result, we obtained a
sample of 81 articles, which strongly deal with the business model concept.
38 | Page
By reviewing the articles in depth we complemented our sample by
additional books and other articles that did not constitute the initial sample. We
also extended the time period to include articles from the years 2010 till 2012 in
an additional review process. We also included relevant working papers that were
not initially revealed by the research. Furthermore, our careful review of the
articles also allowed us to eliminate articles that did not treat the business model
concept on the micro-‐level as centered on the business organization or used the
concept in a trivial way, or simply did not use the concept a center of analysis
despite using the term in the title. As a result we obtained a final sample of 41
articles that deal specifically with the definition and conceptualization of the
business model construct, which is the focus and goal of our research. We apply a
concept-‐centric approach to our analysis and critical literature review (Levy & Ellis,
2006; Webster & Watson, 2002; Wirtz, Pistoia, Ullrich, & Göttel, 2015). Our careful
reading of the articles suggested some important common ground among them.
While some researchers have used the business model term without an
explicit definition taking its meaning for granted (Amit & Zott, 2001; Bouwman,
Haaker, & de Vos, 2008; Govindarajan & Trimble, 2011; Malone, Weill, Lai, D'Urso,
Herman, Apel, & Woerner, 2006; Nunes & Breene, 2011; Richardson, 2008;
Schweizer, 2005), others explicitly define the business model (Casadesus-‐Masanell
& Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Magretta, 2002; Svejenova et
al., 2010; Teece, 2010; Timmers, 1998; Zott & Amit, 2010), while another group
focuses on the enumeration of its components (Lehmann-‐Ortega & Schoettl, 2005;
Mahadevan, 2000; Morris et al., 2005; Osterwalder, Pigneur, & Tucci, 2005;
Richardson, 2008; Yip, 2004), and yet other researchers refer to the definitions of
other scholars (Baden-‐Fuller & Morgan, 2010; Calia, Guerrini, & Moura, 2007;
Gambardella & McGahan, 2010; Hedman & Kalling, 2003; Seddon et al., 2004). We
further observe that that the ubiquity of the term and the glut of its uses imply
that scholars have defined the business model concept on different dimensions,
39 | Page
and the various contexts in which business models have been studied span diverse
domains. Table 2.1 presents a summary of the various conceptualizations,
dimensions, and domains identified in extant literature that cause a proliferation
of definitions and ambiguity in understanding of the business model concept.
Table 2.1: Proliferation of definitions
Conceptualizations Study
Architecture Dubosson-Torbay et al., 2002; Timmers, 1998
Opportunity facilitator George & Bock, 2011
Structural template Amit & Zott, 2001
Statement Stewart & Zhao, 2000
Representation Morris et al., 2005
Cognitive link Fiet & Patel, 2008
Pattern Brousseau & Penard, 2006
Set of activities, resources, and organizing Svejenova et al., 2010
Activity system Zott & Amit, 2010
Framework Afuah, 2004
Method Afuah & Tucci, 2001
Conceptual tool Osterwalder, 2004; Teece, 2010
Recipes Slywotzky & Wise, 2003
Process Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002
Story Magretta, 2002
Business logic of the firm Osterwalder, Pigneur, & Tucci, 2005
Organization’s core logic for creating value Linder & Cantrell, 2001
Simple way of organizing a firm Mitchell & Coles, 2003
Description Appelgate, 2001; Weill & Vitale, 2001
Transactive structures Mahadevan, 2000
Dynamic capability Eden and Ackerman, 2000
Market device Doganova & Eyquem-Renault, 2009
Dimensions Study
Individual Svejenova et al., 2010; Wirtz et al., 2010
Organization Amit & Zott, 2001; Baden-Fuller & Morgan, 2010; Casadesus-Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Santos et al., 2009; Zott & Amit, 2010
Industry Sabatier et al., 2010
Society Thompson & MacMillan, 2010; Yunus et al., 2010
Domains Study
Strategy Casadesus-Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010
Organization theory Svejenova et al., 2010
Entrepreneurship Amit & Zott, 2001; Morris et al., 2005
Technology and innovation Chesbrough, 2003; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002
Biotechnology Durand et al., 2008; Fisken & Rutherford, 2002; Mangematin et al, 2003; Sabatier et al., 2010; Willemstein et al., 2007
Health care Hwang & Christensen, 2008
Information systems Hedman & Kalling, 2003
Internet and e-commerce Afuah & Tucci, 2001; De Reuver et al., 2009; Lumpkin & Dess, 2004; Mahadevan, 2000; Timmers, 1998; Van der Vorst et al., 2002; Wirtz et al., 2010
Open source communities Dahlander & Magnusson, 2008
Customer integration Plé et al., 2009
Emerging markets Eyring et al., 2011; Williamson, 2010
Social networks and knowledge sharing Chung, Yam, & Chan, 2004
Bottom-of-the-pyramid challenges Prahalad, 2006; Seelos & Mair, 2007; Thompson & MacMillan, 2010; Yunus et al., 2010
40 | Page
Table 2.2a: Business models: Past conceptualizations
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ream
, whi
ch id
entif
ies
the
valu
e pr
opos
ition
for t
he b
usin
ess p
artn
ers a
nd th
e bu
yers
; (ii)
the
reve
nue
stre
am, w
hich
is a
pla
n fo
r ass
urin
g re
venu
e ge
nera
tion
for t
he b
usin
ess;
and
(iii)
the
logi
stic
al
stre
am, w
hich
add
ress
es v
ario
us is
sues
rela
ted
to th
e de
sign
of
the
supp
ly c
hain
for t
he b
usin
ess.
Val
ue st
ream
- va
lue
prop
ositi
on /
reve
nue
stre
am -
reve
nue
gene
ratio
n /
logi
stic
al st
ream
- de
sign
of s
uppl
y ch
ain
Ope
ratio
nal
Inte
rnet
/ e-
com
mer
ceV
alue
stre
ams,
trans
actio
n co
st e
cono
mic
s, e-
busi
ness
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Fr
amew
ork
that
can
hel
p pr
actic
ing
man
ager
s und
erst
and
the
notio
n of
bu
sine
ss m
odel
in th
e In
tern
et
cont
ext.
Afu
ah &
Tuc
ci (2
001)
Bus
ines
s mod
el a
s a sy
stem
that
is m
ade
up o
f com
pone
nts,
linka
ges b
etw
een
the
com
pone
nts,
and
dyna
mic
s.C
usto
mer
val
ue /
scop
e / p
rice
/ rev
enue
/ c
onne
cted
act
iviti
es /
impl
emen
tatio
n /
capa
bilit
ies /
sust
aina
bilit
y
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Inte
rnet
/ e-
com
mer
ceA
ctiv
ity sy
stem
Con
cept
ual
-Fr
amew
ork
cons
istin
g of
co
mpo
nent
s to
answ
er th
e qu
estio
n “H
ow to
mak
e m
oney
in m
y in
dust
ry?”
Am
it &
Zot
t (20
01)
A b
usin
ess m
odel
dep
icts
the
cont
ent,
stru
ctur
e, a
nd
gove
rnan
ce o
f tra
nsac
tions
des
igne
d as
to c
reat
e va
lue
thro
ugh
the
expl
oita
tion
of b
usin
ess o
ppor
tuni
ties.
Tran
sact
ion
cont
ent /
tran
sact
ion
stru
ctur
e / t
rans
actio
n go
vern
ance
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Entre
pren
eurs
hip
Val
ue c
hain
, Sc
hum
pete
rian
inno
vatio
n,
trans
actio
n co
st
econ
omic
s, st
rate
gic
netw
orks
, res
ourc
e-ba
sed
view
, e-b
usin
ess
Gro
unde
d th
eory
ap
proa
ch: i
nduc
tive
case
st
udie
s, st
ruct
ured
qu
estio
nnai
res
30 U
S an
d 29
Eu
rope
an e
-bu
sine
ss
com
pani
es th
at
wen
t pub
lic
betw
een
1996
and
19
99.
Bus
ines
s mod
el a
s uni
t of a
naly
sis
in v
alue
cre
atio
n in
the
e-co
mm
erce
con
text
; arc
hite
ctur
al
conf
gura
tion
of th
e co
mpo
nent
s
Lind
er &
Can
trell
(200
1)B
usin
ess m
odel
is th
e or
gani
zatio
n's c
ore
logi
c fo
r cre
atin
g va
lue.
Pr
icin
g m
odel
/ re
venu
e m
odel
/ ch
anne
l mod
el /
com
mer
ce p
roce
ss
mod
el /
Inte
rnet
-ena
bled
com
mer
ce
rela
tions
hip
/ org
aniz
atio
nal f
orm
/ va
lue
prop
ositi
on
Ope
ratio
nal
Man
agem
ent
-In
duct
ive
stud
ies,
qual
itativ
e qu
estio
nnai
res,
seco
ndar
y re
sear
ch
70 c
ompa
ny
exec
utiv
es a
nd
anal
ysts
Bus
ines
s mod
el fr
amew
ork
as li
st
of c
ompo
nent
s.
Petro
vic
et a
l. (2
001)
The
busi
ness
mod
el is
a d
escr
iptio
n of
how
a fi
rm m
akes
m
oney
and
can
sust
ain
itsel
f by
prov
idin
g m
ore
valu
e to
its
clie
nts t
han
com
petit
ors.
Val
ue m
odel
/ re
sour
ce m
odel
, pr
oduc
tion
mod
el, c
usto
mer
rela
tions
m
odel
, rev
enue
mod
el, c
apita
l mod
el,
and
mar
ket m
odel
Ope
ratio
nal
Inte
rnet
/ e-
com
mer
cesy
stem
dyn
amic
s, ac
tivity
sy
stem
sC
once
ptua
l, m
etho
dolo
gy
deve
lopm
ent
-C
once
ptua
l fra
mew
ork
of th
e bu
sine
ss m
odel
.
41 | Page
Table 2.2b: Business models: Past conceptualizations
Stud
yC
once
ptua
lizat
ion
of th
e B
usin
ess
Mod
elB
usin
ess
Mod
el C
ompo
nent
sL
evel
of A
naly
sis
Con
text
The
oret
ical
Per
spec
tive
Met
hod
Sam
ple
Con
trib
utio
n to
Res
earc
h on
B
usin
ess
Mod
els
Rapp
a (2
001)
A b
usin
ess m
odel
is th
e m
etho
d of
doi
ng b
usin
ess b
y w
hich
a
com
pany
can
susta
in it
self
- tha
t is,
gene
rate
reve
nue.
Br
oker
age
/ Adv
ertis
ing
/ Inf
omed
iary
/ M
erch
ant /
Man
ufac
ture
r (D
irect
) /
Affi
liate
/ Co
mm
unity
/ Su
bscr
iptio
n /
Util
ity
Ope
ratio
nal
Inte
rnet
/ e-
com
mer
cee-
busin
ess
Conc
eptu
al-
Taxo
nom
y of
eig
ht b
usin
ess
mod
els o
bser
vabl
e on
the
web
.
Wei
ll &
Vita
tle (2
001)
An
e-bu
sines
s mod
el is
a d
escr
iptio
n of
the
role
s and
re
latio
nshi
ps a
mon
g a
firm
’s c
onsu
mer
s, cu
stom
ers,
allie
s, an
d su
pplie
rs th
at id
entif
ies t
he m
ajor
flow
s of p
rodu
ct,
info
rmat
ion,
and
mon
ey, a
nd th
e m
ajor
ben
efits
to
parti
cipa
nts.
Stra
tegi
c ob
ject
ives
, val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n,re
venu
e so
urce
s, su
cces
s fac
tors
, ch
anne
ls, c
ore
com
pete
ncie
s, cu
stom
er
segm
ents,
and
IT in
frastr
uctu
re
Ope
ratio
nal
Inte
rnet
/ e-
com
mer
cee-
busin
ess
Conc
eptu
al, e
mpi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Sy
stem
atic
and
pra
ctic
al a
naly
sis
of e
ight
ato
mic
e-b
usin
ess m
odel
s. Ev
ery
one
of th
ese
mod
els i
s an
alyz
ed a
ccor
ding
to it
s stra
tegi
cob
ject
ives
and
val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n,
its so
urce
s of r
even
ue, i
ts cr
itica
l su
cces
s fac
tors
and
its c
ore
com
pete
ncie
s.
Ches
brou
gh &
Ro
senb
loom
(200
2)Bu
sines
s Mod
el m
edia
tes b
etw
een
tech
nolo
gy a
nd
econ
omic
val
ue, s
elec
ting
and
filte
ring
tech
nolo
gies
and
pa
ckag
ing
them
into
par
ticul
ar c
onfig
urat
ions
to b
e of
fere
d to
the
mar
ket.
Val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n / t
arge
t mar
kets
/ in
tern
al v
alue
cha
in st
ruct
ure
/ cos
t str
uctu
re a
nd p
rofit
mod
el, v
alue
ne
twor
k / c
ompe
titiv
e str
ateg
y
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Tech
nolo
gy /
inno
vatio
nTe
chno
logy
, con
text
ual
ratio
nalit
y, c
ogni
tion
Indu
ctiv
e stu
dies
, m
ultip
le c
ase
studi
es35
tech
noog
y sp
in-
off c
ompa
nies
th
at
com
mer
cial
ized
te
chno
logy
Fram
ewor
k as
a d
escr
iptio
n of
the
logi
c of
a b
usin
ess s
yste
m fo
r cr
eatin
g va
lue
that
lies
beh
ind
the
actu
al p
roce
sses
.
Mag
retta
(200
2)Bu
sines
s mod
el a
s sto
ries t
hat e
xpla
in h
ow th
e en
terp
rise
wor
ks; a
var
iatio
n of
the
gene
ric v
alue
cha
in u
nder
lyin
g al
l bu
sines
ses.
Busin
ess a
ctiv
ities
ass
ocia
ted
with
m
akin
g so
met
hing
/ bu
sines
s act
iviti
es
asso
ciat
ed w
ith se
lling
som
ethi
ng
Ope
ratio
nal
Stra
tegy
Val
ue c
hain
Conc
eptu
al, e
mpi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-U
nder
stand
diff
eren
ce b
etw
een
busin
ess m
odel
and
stra
tegy
.
Hed
man
& K
allin
g (2
003)
The
busin
ess m
odel
inte
grat
es fi
rm-in
tern
al a
spec
ts th
at
trans
form
fact
ors t
o re
sour
ces,
thro
ugh
activ
ities
, in
a str
uctu
re, t
o pr
oduc
ts an
d of
ferin
gs, t
o m
arke
t.
Custo
mer
s / c
ompe
titor
s / o
fferin
g /
activ
ity a
nd o
rgan
izat
ion
/ res
ourc
es /
supp
ly o
f fac
tor a
nd p
rodu
ctio
n in
puts
/ m
anag
emen
t
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Info
rmat
ion
Syste
ms
Val
ue c
hain
, ind
ustri
al
orga
niza
tion,
reso
urce
-ba
sed
view
, e-b
usin
ess
Conc
eptu
al, e
mpi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-G
ener
ic b
usin
ess m
odel
with
focu
s on
IS.
Mitc
hell
& C
oles
(2
003,
200
4)Bu
sines
s mod
el a
s a si
mpl
e w
ay o
f org
aniz
ing
a co
mpa
ny to
pe
rmit
it to
serv
e its
cus
tom
ers i
n an
effe
ctiv
e w
ay.
Who
/ w
hat /
whe
n / w
here
/ w
hy /
how
/ h
ow m
uch
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
Val
ue c
hain
Qua
litat
ive
inte
rvie
ws
in 1
992,
100
co
mpa
nies
abo
ve
a m
inim
um si
ze
who
se st
ock
pric
es h
ad g
row
n fa
stest
durin
g th
e
Cont
inue
s bus
ines
s mod
el
inno
vatio
n as
pro
cess
to le
apfro
g ah
ead
of c
ompe
titio
n.
Yip
(200
4)Bu
sines
s mod
el a
s tra
nsfo
rmat
ion
and
distr
ibut
ion
proc
esse
s of
the
firm
.V
alue
pro
posit
ion
/ nat
ure
of in
puts
/ ho
w to
tran
sfor
m in
puts
(incl
udin
g te
chno
logy
) / n
atur
e of
out
puts
/ ve
rtica
l sco
pe /
horiz
onta
l sco
pe /
geog
raph
ic sc
ope
/ nat
ure
of c
usto
mer
s / h
ow to
org
anise
Ope
ratio
nal
Stra
tegy
Stra
tegy
, val
ue c
hain
, ac
tivity
syste
mCo
ncep
tual
, em
piric
al
illus
tratio
n by
exa
mpl
es-
Busin
ess m
odel
fram
ewor
k w
ith
emph
asis
on th
e tra
nsfo
rmat
ion
and
the
distr
ibut
ion
proc
esse
s of
the
firm
.
Mor
ris e
t al.
(200
5)Bu
sines
s mod
el a
s a c
onci
se re
pres
enta
tion
of h
ow a
n in
terre
late
d se
t of d
ecisi
on v
aria
bles
in th
e ar
eas o
f ven
ture
str
ateg
y, a
rchi
tect
ure
and
econ
omic
s are
add
ress
ed to
cre
ate
susta
inab
le c
ompe
titiv
e ad
vant
age.
Val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n / c
usto
mer
/ in
tern
al
proc
esse
s and
com
pete
ncie
s / e
cono
mic
fa
ctor
s / c
ompe
titiv
e str
ateg
y / g
row
th
and
time
obje
ctiv
es
Ope
ratio
nal
Entre
pren
eurs
hip
Val
ue c
hain
, res
ourc
e-ba
sed
view
, stra
tegy
, tra
nsac
tion
cost
econ
omic
s
Conc
eptu
al,
met
hodo
logy
de
velo
pmen
t
-Fr
amew
ork
for c
hara
cter
izin
g a
busin
ess m
odel
; rep
rese
ntat
ion
of
firm
spec
ific
aspe
cts o
f the
six
com
pone
nts o
f the
bus
ines
s mod
el
42 | Page
Table 2.2c: Business models: Past conceptualizations
Stud
yC
once
ptua
lizat
ion
of th
e B
usin
ess
Mod
elB
usin
ess
Mod
el C
ompo
nent
sL
evel
of A
naly
sis
Con
text
The
oret
ical
Per
spec
tive
Met
hod
Sam
ple
Con
trib
utio
n to
Res
earc
h on
B
usin
ess
Mod
els
Oste
rwal
der e
t al.
(200
5)A
bus
ines
s mod
el is
a c
once
ptua
l too
l tha
t con
tain
s a se
t of
elem
ents
and
thei
r rel
atio
nshi
ps a
nd a
llow
s exp
ress
ing
the
busin
ess l
ogic
of a
spec
ific
firm
. It i
s a d
escr
iptio
n of
the
valu
e a
com
pany
offe
rs to
one
or s
ever
al se
gmen
ts of
cu
stom
ers a
nd o
f the
arc
hite
ctur
e of
the
firm
and
its n
etw
ork
of p
artn
ers f
or c
reat
ing,
mar
ketin
g, a
nd d
eliv
erin
g th
is va
lue
and
rela
tions
hip
capi
tal,
to g
ener
ate
prof
itabl
e an
d su
stain
able
reve
nue
strea
ms.
Val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n / t
arge
t cus
tom
er /
distr
ibut
ion
chan
nel /
rela
tions
hip
/ va
lue
conf
igur
atio
n / c
ore
com
pete
ncy
/ pa
rtner
net
wor
k / c
ost s
truct
ure
/ re
venu
e m
odel
Ope
ratio
nal
Info
rmat
ion
Syste
ms /
e-
com
mer
ce
e-bu
sines
sCo
ncep
tual
, ont
olog
y-
Busin
ess m
odel
fram
ewor
k as
list
of c
ompo
nent
s.
Schw
eize
r (20
05)
The
busin
ess m
odel
def
ines
the
valu
e ch
ain
cons
tella
tion
and
defin
es h
ow th
e co
mpa
ny is
pos
ition
ed, i
t det
erm
ines
w
here
the
com
petit
ive
adva
ntag
e / m
arke
t pow
er o
f the
co
mpa
ny c
omes
from
, and
it d
escr
ibes
thro
ugh
the
reve
nue
mod
el h
ow th
e co
mpa
ny m
akes
mon
ey.
Val
ue c
hain
con
stella
tion
/ mar
ket
pow
er o
f inn
ovat
ors v
s. ow
ners
of
com
plem
enta
ry a
sset
s / to
tal r
even
ue
pote
ntia
l
Ope
ratio
nal
Stra
tegy
valu
e ch
ain,
reso
urce
-ba
sed
view
Conc
eptu
al-
Typo
logy
of d
iffer
ent b
usin
ess
mod
els a
nd d
escr
iptio
n of
thei
r ch
ange
ove
r tim
e.
Shaf
er e
t al.
(200
5)Bu
sines
s mod
el a
s a re
pres
enta
tion
of a
firm
's un
derly
ing
logi
c an
d str
ateg
ic c
hoic
es fo
r cre
atin
g an
d ca
ptur
ing
valu
e w
ithin
a v
alue
net
wor
k.
Stra
tegi
c ch
oice
s / c
reat
ing
valu
e /
capt
urin
g va
lue
/ val
ue n
etw
ork
Stra
tegi
c (m
acro
)St
rate
gy /
Man
agem
ent
-Co
ncep
tual
-Id
entif
icat
ion
and
clas
sific
atio
n of
th
e co
mpo
nent
s of b
usin
ess
mod
els.
Leco
cq e
t al.
(200
6)Bu
sines
s mod
el d
escr
ibes
and
synt
hesiz
es th
e w
ay o
f cr
eatin
g va
lue
in a
bus
ines
s; it
lead
s man
ager
s to
conc
eptu
aliz
e th
e di
ffere
nt a
ctiv
ities
led
by a
com
pany
to
gene
rate
val
ue fo
r cus
tom
ers a
nd sh
areh
olde
rs.
Reso
urce
s and
com
pete
nces
/ in
tern
al
and
exte
rnal
org
aniz
atio
n / v
alue
pr
opos
ition
s
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tRe
sour
ce-b
ased
vie
w,
activ
ity sy
stem
Conc
eptu
al,
met
hodo
logy
de
velo
pmen
t
-Bu
sines
s mod
el d
ynam
ics
fram
ewor
k: R
COA
mod
el
Mal
one
et a
l. (2
006)
Ope
ratio
nal d
efin
ition
s of 1
2 di
ffere
nt b
usin
ess m
odel
s ba
sed
on c
ombi
natio
n of
two
dim
ensio
ns: (
1) ty
pes o
f rig
hts
bein
g so
ld: c
reat
or /
distr
ibut
or /
land
lord
/ br
oker
and
(2)
asse
t typ
es: p
hysic
al /
finan
cial
/ in
tang
ible
/ hu
man
Two
dim
ensio
ns: (
1) W
hat t
ypes
of
right
s are
bei
ng so
ld a
nd (2
) ass
et ty
pes
Ope
ratio
nal
Man
agem
ent
Reso
urce
-bas
ed v
iew
, tra
nsac
tion
cost
econ
omic
sCo
ncep
tual
-Ty
polo
gy o
f 12
diffe
rent
bus
ines
s m
odel
s and
des
crip
tion
of th
eir
diffe
renc
es in
per
form
ance
.
Bouw
man
et a
l. (2
008)
Busin
ess m
odel
des
crib
es h
ow a
com
pany
or n
etw
ork
of
com
pani
es in
tend
s to
mak
e m
oney
and
cre
ate
cons
umer
va
lue.
Serv
ice
com
pone
nt /
tech
nolo
gica
l co
mpo
nent
/ or
gani
zatio
nal c
ompo
nent
/ f
inan
cial
com
pone
nt
Ope
ratio
nal
Info
rmat
ion
Syste
ms /
e-
com
mer
ce
e-bu
sines
s, in
nova
tion,
te
chno
logy
Conc
eptu
al, e
mpi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Co
ncep
tual
bus
ines
s mod
el
fram
ewor
k - S
TOF
mod
el;
prac
tical
app
roac
hes o
n bu
sines
s m
odel
des
ign
for e
lect
roni
c an
d m
obile
serv
ice
inno
vatio
ns.
John
son
et a
l. (2
008)
Busin
ess m
odel
s con
sist o
f fou
r int
erlo
ckin
g el
emen
ts, th
at,
take
n to
geth
er, c
reat
e an
d de
liver
val
ue: c
usto
mer
val
ue
prop
ositi
on, p
rofit
form
ula,
key
reso
urce
s, ke
y pr
oces
ses.
Custo
mer
val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n / p
rofit
fo
rmul
a / k
ey re
sour
ces /
key
pro
cess
esO
pera
tiona
lSt
rate
gy-
Conc
eptu
al, e
mpi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Co
ncep
tual
bus
ines
s mod
el
fram
ewor
k
Rich
ards
on (2
008)
Busin
ess m
odel
org
aniz
es th
e co
mpo
nent
s of s
trate
gy a
nd
exec
utio
n ar
ound
the
idea
of v
alue
cre
atio
n an
d va
lue
appr
opria
tion.
Val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n / v
alue
cre
atio
n an
d de
liver
y sy
stem
/ va
lue
capt
ure
Ope
ratio
nal
Stra
tegy
Stra
tegy
form
ulat
ion
and
exec
utio
n, v
alue
cha
in,
activ
ity sy
stem
, res
ourc
e-ba
sed
view
Conc
eptu
al-
Busin
ess m
odel
fram
ewor
k to
link
th
e fir
m’s
theo
ry a
bout
how
to
com
pete
to it
s exe
cutio
n.
43 | Page
Table 2.2d: Business models: Past conceptualizations
Stud
yC
once
ptua
lizat
ion
of th
e B
usin
ess
Mod
elB
usin
ess
Mod
el C
ompo
nent
sL
evel
of A
naly
sis
Con
text
The
oret
ical
Per
spec
tive
Met
hod
Sam
ple
Con
trib
utio
n to
Res
earc
h on
B
usin
ess
Mod
els
Bjö
rkda
hl (2
009)
The
busi
ness
mod
el is
def
ined
as t
he lo
gic
and
the
activ
ities
th
at c
reat
e an
d ap
prop
riate
eco
nom
ic v
alue
, and
the
link
betw
een
them
.
Cus
tom
er v
alue
/ cu
stom
er se
gmen
t /
offe
ring
/ rev
enue
mod
el /
sour
cing
/ di
strib
utio
n, se
lling
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Tech
nolo
gyTe
chno
logy
div
ersi
ficat
ion
Indu
ctiv
e st
udy,
mul
tiple
ca
se st
udie
s Th
ree
MN
EsC
once
ptua
l fra
mew
ork
to sh
ow
how
tech
nolo
gy c
ross
-fer
tiliz
atio
n ne
eds t
o be
acc
ompa
nied
by
busi
ness
mod
el c
hang
es in
ord
er to
ac
hiev
e in
crea
sed
econ
omic
val
ue.
Sant
os e
t al.
(200
9)B
usin
ess m
odel
s a c
onfig
urat
ion
of a
ctiv
ities
and
of t
he
orga
niza
tiona
l uni
ts th
at p
erfo
rm th
ose
activ
ities
bot
h w
ithin
an
d ou
tsid
e th
e fir
m d
esig
ned
to c
reat
e va
lue
in th
e pr
oduc
tion
(and
del
iver
y) o
f a sp
ecifi
c pr
oduc
t/mar
ket s
et.
Act
iviti
es /
orga
niza
tiona
l uni
ts /
linka
ges /
gov
erna
nce
mec
hani
sms
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tA
ctiv
ity sy
stem
, res
ourc
e-ba
sed
view
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Th
eory
of b
usin
ess m
odel
in
nova
tion
with
in in
cum
bent
firm
s.
Stor
back
a &
Nen
onen
(2
009)
The
busi
ness
mod
el is
con
figur
atio
n of
inte
rrel
ated
ca
pabi
litie
s, go
vern
ing
the
cont
ent,
proc
ess a
nd
man
agem
ent o
f the
inte
ract
ion
and
exch
ange
in d
yadi
c va
lue
co-c
reat
ion.
Con
tent
of e
xcha
nge
& in
tera
ctio
n /
proc
ess o
f exc
hang
e &
inte
ract
ion
/ m
anag
emen
t of e
xcha
nge
& in
tera
ctio
n
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tR
esou
rce-
base
d vi
ew,
stra
tegy
, cus
tom
er
man
agem
ent,
mar
ketin
g
Con
cept
ual
-C
once
ptua
l fra
mew
ork
of th
e bu
sine
ss m
odel
that
inve
stig
ates
bu
sine
ss m
odel
s as a
bro
ader
co
ncep
tual
izat
ion
of v
alue
co-
crea
tion
and
not j
ust v
alue
cr
eatio
n.
Cas
ades
us-M
asan
ell
& R
icar
t (20
10)
A b
usin
ess m
odel
con
sist
s of a
set o
f cho
ices
and
a se
t of
cons
eque
nces
aris
ing
from
thos
e ch
oice
s; th
at is
, how
the
busi
ness
mod
el is
ass
embl
ed a
nd h
ow th
e di
ffer
ent e
lem
ents
w
ork
toge
ther
.
Cho
ices
(pol
icie
s, as
sets
, gov
erna
nce)
/ co
nseq
uenc
es (f
lexi
ble,
rigi
d) /
theo
ries
Stra
tegi
c (m
acro
)St
rate
gySt
rate
gy, f
it an
d ch
oice
sC
once
ptua
l, em
piric
al
illus
tratio
n by
exa
mpl
es-
Con
cept
ual f
ram
ewor
k to
sepa
rate
an
d re
late
bus
ines
s mod
el a
nd
stra
tegy
.
Dem
il &
Lec
ocq
(201
0)B
usin
ess m
odel
repr
esen
ts th
e w
ay a
ctiv
ities
and
reso
urce
s ar
e us
ed to
ensu
re su
stai
nabi
lity
and
grow
th.
Res
ourc
es a
nd c
ompe
tenc
es /
inte
rnal
an
d ex
tern
al o
rgan
izat
ion
/ val
ue
prop
ositi
ons
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tR
esou
rce-
base
d vi
ew,
activ
ity sy
stem
, fit
and
choi
ces
Con
cept
ual,
met
hodo
logy
de
velo
pmen
t
One
cas
e st
udy:
fo
otba
ll cl
ub
Ars
enal
FC
Fram
ewor
k on
bus
ines
s mod
el
dyna
mic
s.
Doz
& K
oson
en
(201
0)B
usin
ess m
odel
as s
et o
f stru
ctur
ed a
nd in
terd
epen
dent
op
erat
iona
l rel
atio
nshi
ps b
etw
een
a fir
m a
nd it
s cus
tom
ers,
supp
liers
, com
plem
ento
rs, p
artn
ers a
nd o
ther
stak
ehol
ders
, an
d am
ong
its in
tern
al u
nits
and
dep
artm
ents
(fun
ctio
ns,
staf
f, op
erat
ing
units
, etc
). It
stan
d as
cog
nitiv
e st
ruct
ure
prov
idin
g a
theo
ry o
f how
to se
t bou
ndar
ies t
o th
e fir
m, o
f ho
w to
cre
ate
valu
e, a
nd h
ow to
org
anis
e its
inte
rnal
st
ruct
ure
and
gove
rnan
ce.
Cus
tom
ers,
supp
liers
, com
plem
ento
rs,
partn
ers,
othe
r sta
keho
lder
s / u
nits
and
de
partm
ents
/ in
tern
al st
ruct
ures
and
go
vern
ance
/ or
gani
zing
/ va
lue
crea
tion
/ bou
ndar
ies
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tR
esou
rce-
base
d vi
ew,
activ
ity sy
stem
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
12 c
ompa
nies
that
w
ere
reco
ncei
ving
thei
r bu
sine
ss m
odel
s.
Und
erst
and
conc
rete
lead
ersh
ip
actio
ns e
nabl
ing
the
met
a-ca
pabi
litie
s nee
ded
to a
ccel
erat
e th
e re
new
al a
nd tr
ansf
orm
atio
n of
bu
sine
ss m
odel
s.
Gam
bard
ella
&
McG
ahan
(201
0)B
usin
ess m
odel
is a
mec
hani
sm fo
r tur
ning
idea
s int
o re
venu
e at
reas
onab
le c
ost,
and
inco
rpor
ates
ass
umpt
ions
ab
out h
ow it
will
bot
h cr
eate
and
cap
ture
val
ue.
Act
iviti
es /
reso
urce
sO
rgan
izat
iona
l (m
icro
)Te
chno
logy
/ in
nova
tion
Act
ivity
syst
em, r
esou
rce-
bsed
vie
w, t
echn
olog
y lic
ensi
ng, i
nnov
atio
n
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-C
once
ptua
l fra
mew
ork
of b
usin
ess
mod
el in
nova
tion
for l
icen
sing
of
gene
ral-p
urpo
se te
chno
logi
es.
Itam
i & N
ishi
no
(201
0)A
bus
ines
s mod
el is
a p
rofit
mod
el, a
bus
ines
s del
iver
y sy
stem
and
a le
arni
ng sy
stem
.B
usin
ess s
yste
m /
prof
it m
odel
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tR
esou
rce-
base
d vi
ew,
know
ledg
e-ba
sed
view
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-B
usin
ess m
odel
fram
ewor
k
McG
rath
(201
0)D
efin
es tw
o co
re c
ompo
nent
s of a
bus
ines
s mod
el: ‘
basi
c un
it’ o
f bus
ines
s (re
fers
to w
hat c
usto
mer
s pay
for)
and
pr
oces
s or o
pera
tiona
l adv
anta
ges (
choi
ces o
f pro
cess
step
s, sp
ecifi
cally
whi
ch se
ts o
f act
iviti
es a
re e
mpl
oyed
to se
ll ‘b
asic
uni
ts’ o
f bus
ines
s).
Uni
t of b
usin
ess /
key
met
rics o
f pr
oces
sor
ope
ratio
nal a
dvan
tage
s for
del
iver
ing
supe
rior p
erfo
rman
ce
Ope
ratio
nal
Stra
tegy
/ M
anag
emen
tD
isco
very
driv
en st
rate
gy,
expe
rimen
tatio
n, c
hoic
esC
once
ptua
l, em
piric
al
illus
tratio
n by
exa
mpl
es-
Dis
cuss
ion
on h
ow th
e bu
sine
ss
mod
el c
once
pt o
ffer
s new
idea
s for
st
rate
gy fo
rmul
atio
n an
ddi
scov
ery
driv
en st
rate
gic
thin
king
.
44 | Page
Table 2.2e: Business models: Past conceptualizations
Stud
yC
once
ptua
lizat
ion
of th
e B
usin
ess
Mod
elB
usin
ess
Mod
el C
ompo
nent
sL
evel
of A
naly
sis
Con
text
The
oret
ical
Per
spec
tive
Met
hod
Sam
ple
Con
trib
utio
n to
Res
earc
h on
B
usin
ess
Mod
els
Saba
tier e
t al.
(201
0)Th
e bu
sine
ss m
odel
is a
t the
cro
ss ro
ads o
f com
pete
nce
and
cons
umer
nee
ds. P
ortfo
lio o
f bus
ines
s mod
els a
s the
rang
e of
diff
eren
t way
s a fi
rm d
eliv
ers v
alue
to it
s cus
tom
ers t
o en
sure
bot
h its
med
ium
term
via
bilit
y an
d fu
ture
de
velo
pmen
t.
Leve
l of p
rom
ise
(lag
betw
een
inve
stm
ent a
nd re
venu
es, l
evel
of r
isk
and
expe
cted
retu
rns)
/ In
terd
epen
denc
ies w
ithot
her o
rgan
izat
ion
Stra
tegi
c (m
acro
)B
iote
chno
logy
/ B
ioph
arm
aR
esou
rce-
base
d vi
ew,
activ
ity sy
stem
, con
sum
er
man
agem
ent
Indu
ctiv
e st
udy,
mul
tiple
ca
se st
udie
s Ex
pert
insi
ghts
an
d bu
sine
ss
mod
el c
ase
stud
ies o
f fou
r Eu
rope
an
biot
echn
plog
y fir
ms
Con
cept
of a
bus
ines
s mod
el
portf
olio
.
Smith
et a
l. (2
010)
A b
usin
ess m
odel
is th
e de
sign
by
whi
ch a
n or
gani
zatio
n co
nver
ts a
giv
en se
t of s
trate
gic
choi
ces -
abo
ut m
arke
ts,
cust
omer
s, va
lue
prop
ositi
ons e
into
val
ue, a
nd u
ses a
pa
rticu
lar o
rgan
izat
iona
l arc
hite
ctur
e e
of p
eopl
e,
com
pete
ncie
s, pr
oces
ses,
cultu
re a
nd m
easu
rem
ent s
yste
ms -
in
ord
er to
cre
ate
and
capt
ure
this
val
ue.
Cho
ices
/ or
gani
zatio
nal a
rchi
tect
ure
Stra
tegi
c (m
acro
)St
rate
gyC
hoic
es a
nf fi
t, ac
tivity
sy
stem
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Id
entif
icat
ion
of se
vera
l typ
es o
f co
mpl
ex b
usin
ess m
odel
s tha
t see
k va
lue
by su
ppor
ting
para
doxi
cal
stra
tegi
es, i
nclu
ding
am
bide
xtro
us
orga
niza
tions
, soc
ial e
nter
pris
es
and
lear
ning
org
aniz
atio
ns.
Svej
enov
a et
al.
(201
0)B
usin
ess m
odel
as t
he se
t of a
ctiv
ities
, org
aniz
ing,
and
st
rate
gic
reso
urce
s tha
t tra
nsfo
rm a
n in
tern
al d
rive
for
busi
ness
cre
atio
n in
to d
istin
ctiv
e va
lue
prop
ositi
on, w
hich
al
ows a
firm
to c
reat
e an
d ca
ptur
e va
lue.
Driv
e (a
lertn
ess,
crea
tivity
, int
ent)
/ ac
tiviti
es /
reso
urce
s / o
rgan
izin
g /
valu
e cr
eatio
n, a
ppro
pria
tion,
slip
page
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Entre
pren
eurs
hip
/ st
rate
gyR
esou
rce-
bsed
vie
w,
activ
ity sy
stem
, or
gani
zatio
nal t
heor
y
Indu
ctiv
e st
udy,
one
in-
dept
h ca
se st
udy
Cas
e st
udy:
Fe
rran
Adr
iaFr
amew
ork
of m
ulti-
leve
l, m
ulti-
perio
d th
eore
tical
per
spec
tive
of
busi
ness
mod
el
evol
utio
n.
Teec
e (2
010)
Bus
ines
s mod
el d
escr
ibes
the
desi
gn o
r arc
hite
ctur
e of
the
valu
e cr
eatio
n, d
eliv
ery,
and
cap
ture
mec
hani
sms i
t em
ploy
s. Th
e es
senc
e of
a b
usin
ess m
odel
is in
def
inin
g th
e m
anne
r by
whi
ch th
e en
terp
rise
deliv
ers v
alue
to c
usto
mer
s, en
tices
cus
tom
ers t
o pa
y fo
r val
ue, a
nd c
onve
rts th
ose
paym
ents
to p
rofit
.
Tech
nolo
gies
and
feat
ure
of p
rodu
ct,
serv
ice
/ ben
efits
/ m
arke
t seg
men
ts /
reve
nue
stre
am /
desi
gn m
echa
nism
s to
capt
ure
valu
e
Ope
ratio
nal
Stra
tegy
Econ
omic
theo
ry, v
alue
ch
ain
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-U
nder
stan
d th
e si
gnifi
canc
e of
bu
sine
ss m
odel
s and
exp
lore
thei
r co
nnec
tions
with
bus
ines
s stra
tegy
, in
nova
tion
man
agem
ent,
and
econ
omic
theo
ry.
Will
iam
son
(201
0)A
cos
t inn
ovat
ion
busi
ness
mod
el o
ffer
s adv
anta
ges i
n ra
dica
lly n
ew w
ays m
eani
ng m
ore
for l
ess.
Cos
t inn
ovat
ion
capa
bilit
ies
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Emer
ging
mar
kets
Tech
nolo
gy in
nova
tion,
R
ever
se in
nova
tion,
st
rate
gy
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ples
-Fr
amew
ork
for c
ost i
nnov
atio
n bu
sine
ss m
odel
s.
Wirt
z et
al.
(201
0)A
bus
ines
s mod
el re
flect
s the
ope
ratio
nal a
nd o
utpu
t sys
tem
of
a c
ompa
ny, a
nd a
s suc
h ca
ptur
es th
e w
ay th
e fir
m
func
tions
and
cre
ates
val
ue.
Sour
cing
dom
ain
/ val
ue g
ener
atio
n do
mai
n / v
alue
off
erin
g do
mai
n /
dist
ribut
ion
dom
ain
/ rev
enue
dom
ain
Ope
ratio
nal
Inte
rnet
/ St
rate
gyR
esou
rce-
base
d vi
ew, e
-bu
sine
ssC
once
ptua
l, em
piric
al
illus
tratio
n by
exa
mpl
e-
Web
2 fr
amew
ork
that
del
inea
tes
four
bas
ic ty
pes o
f pro
toty
pica
l In
tern
et b
usin
ess m
odel
s: C
onte
nt,
Com
mer
ce, C
onte
xt a
nd
Con
nect
ion.
Yun
us e
t al.
(201
0)A
bus
ines
s mod
el is
a v
alue
syst
em p
lus a
val
ue
cons
tella
tion.
Val
ue p
ropo
sitio
n / v
alue
con
stel
latio
n /
prof
it eq
uatio
nO
pera
tiona
lEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts /
entre
pren
eurs
hip
Cor
pora
te so
cial
re
spon
sibi
lity
(CSR
), so
cial
bus
ines
s
Indu
ctiv
e st
udy,
one
in-
dept
h ca
se st
udy
Cas
e st
udy:
The
G
ram
een
Gro
upFr
amew
ork
of so
cial
bus
ines
s m
odel
as b
usin
ess m
odel
in
nova
tion.
Zott
& A
mit
(201
0)B
usin
ess m
odel
as a
syst
em o
f int
erde
pend
ent a
ctiv
ities
that
tra
nsce
nden
ts th
e fo
cal f
irm a
nd sp
ans i
ts b
ound
arie
s.C
onte
nt o
f an
activ
ity sy
stem
/ St
ruct
ure
of a
n ac
tivity
syst
em /
Gov
erna
nce
of o
f an
activ
ity sy
stem
Org
aniz
atio
nal (
mic
ro)
Stra
tegy
/ en
trepr
eneu
rshi
pA
ctiv
ity sy
stem
Con
cept
ual,
empi
rical
ill
ustra
tion
by e
xam
ple
-C
once
pt o
f bus
ines
s mod
el a
s ac
tivity
syst
em.
45 | Page
The reasons for studying the business model on multiple levels of analysis lie
in the characteristics of the business model phenomenon itself. Business models
are designed, developed, employed and have effects on different levels and in
different domains simultaneously. Scholars have contributed to increasing our
understanding of the business model by invoking different levels of analysis, such
as the strategic level, organizational level, and operational level. A detailed
summary of past definitions and conceptualizations, the levels of analysis,
dimensions and domains is presented in Tables 2.2a-‐e above. The following
paragraphs highlight the levels of analysis that have been identified and illustrate
the richness of approaches.
2.2.1 Strategic level of analysis
On the strategic level of analysis, the business model is defined as a
representation of a firm's underlying logic and strategic choices for creating and
capturing value within a value network (Shafer et al., 2005). At the cross roads of
competence and consumer needs it represents different ways a firm delivers value
to its customers to ensure both its medium term viability and future development
(Sabatier et al., 2010), the design by which an organization converts a given set of
strategic choices about markets, customers, value propositions into value, and
uses a particular organizational architecture of people, competencies, processes,
culture and measurement systems in order to create and capture this value
(McGrath, 2010; Smith et al., 2010).
Definitions on this level of analysis, driven by contingency theory, build on
insights and concepts of strategy, such as choices and choice structures
(Siggelkow, 2002a; Simon, 1962), fit between choices (Chandler, 1962), their
interaction and complementarities. The components of choices and fit driving the
46 | Page
business model definitions have their roots in Wright’s (1931) notion of a fitness
landscape, the further elaborated NK model introduced by Kauffman (1993) and
other related fitness landscapes discussed by Gavetti (2000), Levinthal (1997), and
Rivkin (2000), which in turn underpin the dynamics of the business model concept
that occur through the interaction between choices, consequences, and new
choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Govindarajan & Trimble, 2011). The
business model concept permits exploration of the nuances of choice structures
(Siggelkow, 2002a, 2002b) and helps move the strategy field beyond rhetorical
appeals regarding the relative importance of linkages, choices, and fitness.
Moreover, on this strategic level, definitions imply the nature of competition
through business models as an important aspect and emphasize the overall
direction in the firm’s market positioning, interactions across organizational
boundaries, and growth opportunities whereby competitive advantage and
sustainability are of main concern.
2.2.2 Organizational level of analysis
On the organizational level of analysis definitions build on organization
theory in terms of organizing and configuration by adopting the resource-‐based
view for business model conceptualization (Priem & Butler, 2001) and Penrose’s
(1959) view of the firm as bundle of resources and capabilities, rather than
contracts or transactions. Some scholars apply the resource-‐based view to explain
the business model concept through resource acquisition and allocation (Garnsey,
Lorenzoni, & Ferriani, 2008) predicated on the assumption that firms acquire and
deploy resources in parallel to the implementation of new business models
(Hamel, 1998). In light of the resource-‐based view the business model is
interpreted as a bundle of activities, a “complex set of interdependent routines
47 | Page
that are discovered, adjusted, and fine-‐tuned by ‘doing’” (Winter & Szulanski,
2001: 731). McEvily, Das, and McCabe (2000) advance this concept and suggest
that the transactive element of market need is connected by some variants to the
key business activities and consequently, business model elements are discovered
experientially and evolve without managerial agency.
In its broadest sense the business model is defined as a system that is made
up of components, linkages between the components, and dynamics (Afuah &
Tucci, 2001; Afuah, 2004). On this level of analysis, scholars make conceptions of
the business model operational by defining the business model as a way activities
and resources are organized and employed to ensure sustainability and growth
(Demil & Lecocq, 2010), configuration of interrelated capabilities, governing the
content, process and management of the interaction and exchange in dyadic value
co-‐creation (Storbacka & Nenonen, 2009), and as an architecture for the product,
service and information flows, including a description of the various business
actors and their roles (Timmers, 1998). Other scholars define the business model
as a system of interdependent activities that transcendents the focal firm and
spans its boundaries (Zott & Amit, 2010), as depicting the content, structure, and
governance of transactions designed as to create value through the exploitation of
business opportunities (Amit & Zott, 2001), and as a set of activities, their
organizing, and strategic resources to transform business opportunities into a
distinct value proposition (Svejenova et al., 2010).
Another stream of research conceptualizes the business model along the
value chain concept (Porter, 1985) whereby the business model is defined as a
configuration of activities and the organizational units that perform those
activities both within and outside the firm designed to create value in the
production and delivery of a specific product/market set (Santos et al., 2009), or as
integrating firm-‐internal aspects that transform factors to resources, through
48 | Page
activities, in a structure, to products and offerings, to market (Hedman & Kalling,
2003). The review of past research implies that on the organizational level of
analysis scholars, implicitly or explicitly, support the notions of activities and their
configuration in their definitions of the business model concept.
On this level of analysis the business model is rooted in the configurative
approach and acts as a structural construct that captures the firm’s architecture of
transactions and activities with external parties within the firm’s value network
(Zott & Amit, 2008). The definitions further operationalize the business model as a
dynamic concept driven by the interaction of the activities and resources in the
transformation of business opportunities on the organizational dimension and
passion and interest on the individual dimension (Svejenova et al., 2010) into
value creation. Definitions involve the integration and coordination of the various
activities needed to design, manufacturer, deliver, and support the product or
service offering of each business within the corporate portfolio (Porter, 1980;
Hambrick, MacMillan, & Day, 1982).
2.2.3 Operational level of analysis
On the operational level of analysis, definitions are driven by ontology and
scholars focus on the analysis of individual elements that constitute a business
model. In a prescriptive way, they present the business model as a static concept
in terms of a rigorous framework identifying elements as building blocks of the
business model. Ontology helps identifying and understanding the relevant
elements in a specific domain and the relationships between them (Morecroft,
1994; Ushold & King, 1995), and the formalized business model allows the firm to
communicate and share its understanding among other stakeholders (Fensel,
2001). While the elements act as building blocks, the various conceptualizations
49 | Page
offer guidance on the creation of new business models and allow the comparison
of existing ones (Lehmann-‐Ortega & Schoettl, 2005).
Researchers define the elements a priori based on the phenomenon at hand.
Elements are not consistent and vary widely. While some researchers define the
elements very broadly (Hamel, 2000; Johnson et al., 2008; Mahadevan, 2000;
Morris et al., 2005; Lehman-‐Ortega & Schoettl, 2005; Teece, 2010), others
enumerate them in more detail (Morris et al, 2005; Yip, 2004), or adopt a rigorous
modeling approach (Osterwalder & Pigneur, 2002). For example, Johnson et al.
(2008) define the business model as consisting of a customer value proposition, a
profit formula, key resources, and key processes, whereby the four elements are
interrelated. Following a similar approach, Hamel (2000) conceptualizes the
business model as a spectrum of modules, including customer interface, core
strategy, strategic resources and a value network, while Venkatraman and
Henderson (1998) define it as a coordinated plan to design strategy along
customer interaction, asset configuration and knowledge leverage components.
Other scholars applying the normative perspective define the business model as
an integrative framework for strategy formulation and execution, organized
around the idea of creating superior value and capture a greater amount of that
value than competitors (Perkman & Spicer, 2010; Richardson, 2008).
Groups of conceptualizations show consistency across the strategic,
organizational, and operational level of analysis respectively. Some researchers
view the business model through strategy and competition lenses and relate their
conceptualizations to competitive strategy, positioning, and the nature of
competition with different business models (Shafer et al., 2005; Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2010), other scholars place their focus on resources and
activities configurations (Svejenova et al., 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010), while yet
another group of researchers relates to the origins of entrepreneurial activity and
50 | Page
opportunity recognition and exploitation, and thus place the focus on the
ontological dimension and guidelines on what elements constitute the business
model concept (Morris et al., 2005, 2006; Osterwalder et al., 2005). Based on our
findings we identify three perspectives on the business model concept prevailing
in research, which we will discuss in the following section.
2.3 Revisiting: Three Perspectives on Business Model
Conceptualization
The multi-‐level review on extant research on business models reveals that
scholars implicitly apply different perspectives on the business model concept. We
synthesize the various conceptualizations and definitions from past research by
applying different theoretical lenses, notions of strategy, ontology, resource-‐ and
activity-‐based views, and opportunity exploitation. We identify three prevailing
perspectives scholars apply to define the business model concept: the strategic
perspective, the organizational perspective, and the normative perspective. The
perspectives have their sources in the strategic, organizational, and operational
level of analysis on which scholars study the concept, are influenced by different
theories and concepts, place emphasis on different outcomes in terms of value
creation, appropriation, and capture, and imply different levels of activeness. The
name assigned to each perspective represents its primary focus. The three
perspectives are not independent, however, for present purposes they will be
treated according to their independent descriptions identified from extant
research. Table 2.3 presents a summary of the three perspectives.
51 | Page
Table 2.3: Business models: Past conceptualizations
Att
ribu
tes o
f com
pari
son
Stra
tegi
c Pe
rspe
ctiv
eO
rgan
izat
iona
l Per
spec
tive
Nor
mat
ive
Pers
pect
ive
Con
cept
ualiz
atio
nB
usin
ess m
odel
as a
set o
f cho
ices
, ref
lect
ion
of
stra
tegy
Bus
ines
s mod
el a
s an
activ
ity sy
stem
Bus
ines
s mod
el a
s mod
el
Sum
mar
y of
per
spec
tive
Syst
em o
f int
erac
tion
betw
een
choi
ces a
nd th
e co
nseq
uenc
es d
eriv
ed fr
om th
e ch
oice
s; d
eter
min
ed
by fi
t am
ong
choi
ces.
Syst
em o
f act
iviti
es, r
esou
rces
, and
thei
r org
aniz
ing;
det
erm
inde
d by
fit
amon
g lin
kage
s bet
wee
n ac
tiviti
es.
Gui
danc
e on
wha
t ele
men
ts a
nd su
b-el
emen
ts a
bus
ines
s mod
el sh
ould
co
nsis
t of;
fram
ewor
k of
bui
ldin
g bl
ocks
.
Rep
rese
ntat
ive
defin
ition
sB
usin
ess m
odel
as a
repr
esen
tatio
n of
a fi
rm's
unde
rlyin
g lo
gic
and
stra
tegi
c ch
oice
s for
cre
atin
g an
d ca
ptur
ing
valu
e w
ithin
the
valu
e ne
twor
k (S
hafe
r et a
l. 20
05; C
asad
esus
-Mas
anel
l & R
icar
t 201
0; S
mith
et a
l. 20
10)
Bus
ines
s mod
el a
s a sy
stem
of i
nter
depe
nden
t act
iviti
es th
at
trans
cede
nts t
he fo
cal f
irm a
nd sp
ans i
ts b
ound
arie
s (Zo
tt &
Am
it 20
10);
a se
t of a
ctiv
ities
, res
ourc
es, a
nd o
rgan
izin
g th
at tr
ansf
orm
s ex
tern
al o
ppor
tuni
ties i
nto
a di
stin
ctiv
e va
lue
prop
ositi
on a
nd a
llow
s th
e fir
m to
cap
ture
par
t of t
he v
alue
cre
ated
(Sve
jeno
va e
t al.
2010
); a
sy
stem
that
is m
ade
up o
f com
pone
nts,
linka
ges b
etw
een
the
com
pone
nts,
and
dyna
mic
s (A
fuah
& T
ucci
200
1)
Bus
ines
s mod
el a
s a c
onci
se re
pres
enta
tion
of h
ow a
n in
terr
elat
ed se
t of
dec
isio
n va
riabl
es in
the
area
s of v
entu
re st
rate
gy, a
rchi
tect
ure
and
econ
omic
s are
add
ress
ed to
cre
ate
sust
aina
ble
com
petit
ive
adva
ntag
e (M
orris
et a
l. 20
05);
elem
ents
of t
he d
esig
n an
d ar
chite
ctur
e of
the
valu
e cr
eatio
n, d
eliv
ery
and
capt
ure
mec
hani
sms (
Teec
e 20
10)
Rep
rese
ntat
ive
stud
ies
Sedd
on e
t al.
(200
4); S
hafe
r et a
l. (2
005)
; Cas
ades
us-
Mas
anel
l & R
icar
t (20
10);
Saba
tier e
t al.
(201
0);
Smith
et a
l. (2
010)
; Cas
ades
us-M
asan
ell &
Zhu
(2
013)
Tim
mer
s (19
98);
App
elga
te (2
000)
; Mah
adev
an (2
000)
; Afu
ah &
Tuc
ci
(200
1);
Am
it &
Zot
t (20
01);
Che
sbro
ugh
& R
osen
bloo
m (2
002)
; H
edm
an a
nd K
allin
g (2
003)
; Mitc
hell
& C
oles
(200
3); A
mm
ar (2
006)
; Sa
ntos
et a
l. (2
009)
; Che
sbro
ugh
(201
0); D
emil
& L
ecoc
q (2
010)
; Sv
ejen
ova
et a
l. (2
010)
; Zot
t & A
mit
(201
0)
Venk
atra
man
& H
ende
rson
(199
8); H
amel
(200
0); M
agre
tta (2
002)
; D
elm
ar &
Sha
ne (2
003)
; Yip
(200
4); L
ehm
ann-
Orte
ga &
Sch
oettl
(2
005)
; Mor
ris e
t al.
(200
5); J
ohns
on e
t al.
(200
8); R
icha
rdso
n (2
008)
; D
ogan
ova
& E
yque
m-R
enau
lt (2
009)
; Bad
en-F
ulle
r & M
orga
n (2
010)
; B
aden
-Ful
ler e
t al.
(201
0); M
cGra
th (2
010)
; Tee
ce (2
010)
Key
com
pone
nts
Cho
ices
, con
sequ
ence
s, fe
edba
ck c
ycle
sA
ctiv
ities
, res
ourc
es, r
elat
ions
hips
Vario
us e
lem
ents
as b
uild
ing
bloc
ks
Act
iven
ess
Dyn
amic
Dyn
amic
Stat
ic
Ant
eced
ent
Stra
tegi
c (m
acro
) lev
el o
f ana
lysi
sO
rgan
izat
iona
l (m
icro
) lev
el o
f ana
lysi
sO
pera
tiona
l lev
el
Theo
retic
al le
nses
Stra
tegy
, cho
ices
and
fit,
cont
inge
ncy
theo
ry, f
itnes
s la
ndsc
apes
Res
ourc
e-ba
sed
view
, con
figur
atio
n th
eory
, org
aniz
atio
nal t
heor
y, v
alue
ch
ain
Opp
ortu
nity
exp
loita
tion
/ exp
lora
tion,
bur
eauc
racy
as t
heor
y of
the
firm
Wor
ld v
iew
Age
ntic
wor
ldA
gent
ic w
orld
Det
erm
ined
wor
ld
Idio
sync
raci
esIn
terp
retiv
eIn
terp
retiv
e Pr
escr
iptiv
e
Valu
e cr
eatio
nA
lignm
ent t
o go
al, r
einf
orce
men
t, vi
rtuou
snes
s, ro
bust
ness
(inte
rnal
fit a
mon
g th
e ch
oice
s and
the
exte
rnal
fit
with
the
envi
ronm
ent)
Nov
elty
, com
plem
enta
ritie
s, lo
ck-in
, effi
cien
cy(c
onfig
urat
ions
of a
ctiv
ities
, res
ourc
es, a
nd li
nkag
es th
at d
eter
min
e di
ffere
nt b
usin
ess m
odel
arc
hite
ctur
e de
sign
them
es)
Con
sist
ency
bet
wee
n el
emen
ts -
the
build
ing
bloc
ks (v
alue
cha
in,
activ
ity sy
stem
s, an
d va
lue
netw
orks
asp
ects
as s
truct
ural
sub-
elem
ents
of
val
ue c
reat
ion
mec
hani
sm)
Valu
e ap
prop
riatio
n B
arrie
rs to
thre
ats t
o th
e is
olat
ing
mec
hani
sms
Com
plex
arc
hite
ctur
e as
isol
atin
g m
echa
nism
Rev
enue
mod
el a
nd p
rofit
form
ula
Focu
s of
valu
eVa
lue
appr
opria
tion
Valu
e cr
eatio
nVa
lue
capt
ure
(rev
enue
gen
erat
ion)
52 | Page
2.3.1 Strategic perspective: Business models as set of choices
The strategic perspective on business models views the business model as a
set of choices and takes thereby a contingency approach to describe the
relationship between firm’s strategic choices and the environment. Here, the
business model is viewed as a system of interdependent choices representing the
business model as an abstraction of strategy (Ammar, 2006), a reflection of the
realized strategy (Baden-‐Fuller & Morgan, 2010; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart,
2010; Smith et al., 2010). Viewed from this perspective, the firm converts a given
set of choices about markets, customers, value proposition into value through the
business model, and uses a particular organizational structure of people,
competencies, processes, culture and measurement systems in order to create
and capture this value (Smith et al., 2010). Choices the firm makes define the
architecture of the business model, and expansion paths develop from there on
out (Lecocq, Damil, & Warnier, 2006). The choices and the arising consequences
are mutually supportive and internally consistent (Shafer et al., 2005), whereby
the internal fit between choices as well as the external fit between choices and the
firm’s environment are of crucial importance (Siggelkow, 2001).
Explicit choices, which characterize the firm, are made both intentionally and
by default (Morris et al., 2005; Porter, 1996). They yield consequences and cause
voluntary actions by the firm, however, such choices may also have unexpected
emerging consequences (Demil & Lecocq, 2010). The strategic perspective is
characterized by trade-‐offs in making choices, just as strategy is determined by
trade-‐offs in competing (Porter, 1996). Without trade-‐offs, there would be no
need for any choice and hence no need for strategy and the business model. Fit
among choices, a fundamental idea in strategy and a central component of
competitive advantage, plays an essential role in the concept of business models
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viewed from this perspective because discrete choices often affect one another
and fit amplifies trade-‐offs (Porter, 1996; Prasad, 2010; Siggelkow, 2002a).
Choices can be partitioned into autonomous, influential and contingent
choices. Autonomous choices are disconnected from others, and if wrong, cannot
be compensated for by contingent choices. They can be made independently of an
overarching choice in the business model and therefore have the quality of
operational policies, or also referred to as tactical choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell &
Ricart, 2010; Porter, 1996). Contingent choices are more influenced than
influential and they can be either advantage-‐seeking or disadvantage-‐mitigating.
Influential choices are interrelated with other choices and are more influential
than influenced. However, less contingent choices are also less influential
(Ghemawat & Levinthal, 2008). It is important for a firm to parse out the separate
effects of influential, contingent, and autonomous choices in the business model
design in order to distinguish the strategic choices, and understand the
implications for the business model of such choices being specified correctly or
incorrectly (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Ghemawat & Levinthal, 2008;
Siggelkow, 2002a, 2002b).
Some choices condition other choices. Such interactions among choices can
be either cross-‐sectional – tightly linked, complementary choices across a firm’s
full array of operational possibilities (Porter, 1996) – or longitudinal –
characterized by firms’ resource stocks, strategic commitments or capability
development trajectories (Ghemawat, 1991; Teece & Pisano, 1994; Wernerfelt,
1984) with emphasis on temporal interactions among choices (Ghemawat &
Levinthal, 2008). Distinguishing between cross-‐sectional and longitudinal
interactions among choices is important to understand the arising consequences
in the business model. Strategic positions of firms are determined by the choices
made in the business model and are followed by local search over tactical choices
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(Casadesus-‐Masanell & Zhu, 2013; Ghemawat & Levinthal, 2008). Tactical
interaction refers to firms affecting each other by competing within the horizontal
and vertical boundaries (Barney, 1999; Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005) set by their
business models (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Zhu,
2013).
Viewed from the strategic perspective, the business model is intrinsically
dynamic due to the interplay between choices and consequences, which occur
over time. The arising consequences of the choices a firm makes lead to new
choices thereby creating virtuous or vicious cycles. Virtuous cycles are feedback
loops that, with every iteration, strengthen the value of the components of the
model, further develop valuable resources, and lead to higher value creation for
target users, while vicious cycles have the contrary effect and weaken the value
creation and capture ability of the business model by reducing the value its
components (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Demil & Lecocq, 2010;
Govindarajan & Trimble, 2011; Lecocq et al., 2006; Shafer et al., 2005).
2.3.2 Organizational perspective: Business models as activity-‐systems
The organizational perspective views the business model as an activity
system and takes thereby a configurative approach to describe the internal
relationship among activities and resources in a business model. Scholars following
this perspective conceptualize the business model as a system of interdependent
activities with a strong focus on value creation. Here, every business model implies
a different set of activities and resources, as well as their organizing, the linkages
between the activities, resources and the value network to perform them through
cooperation with partners, suppliers or customers (Santos et al., 2009; Svejenova
et al., 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010). Activity systems as the essence of the business
55 | Page
model are embedded in the concepts of strategy (Porter, 1996) and competitive
advantage (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a,b), but also organizational design, where the
role of managerial agency in determining organizational structures resonates with
the configuration of firm products, activities, and markets (Hunt, 1970). They refer
to any number of practices that allow the business model to better utilize its
inputs and achieve excellence in individual activities, resources and the overall
business model architecture (Hedman & Kalling, 2003; Santos et al., 2009; Zott &
Amit, 2010). Here, the business model includes activities performed outside the
focal firm’s boundaries by partners, customers, suppliers, and other stakeholders,
which allow the firm to have access to external strategic resources and capabilities
through the business model design. In some instances entire key activities are
shifted outside the firm, but they remain a central part of the focal firm’s business
model (Chesbrough, 2003, 2007a, b; Santos et al., 2009; Zott & Amit, 2010).
While Milgrom and Roberts (1990, 1995) emphasize the complementarity
among activities, Porter and Siggelkow (2008) note that interdependency among
activities also takes the form of substitutability of activities when the presence of
one activity decreases the marginal benefit of another one, which implies the
contextual nature of interaction (Blackler, 1993). Interdependencies and
configuration of activities are central to the concept of an activity system and go
beyond coordination and cooperation (Stieglitz & Heine, 2007). They enable the
evolution of a focal firm’s activity system over time as its competitive environment
changes (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002). When the competitive landscape changes, firms
adjust their activity systems and reconfigure the sets of activities within the
business model (Siggelkow & Levinthal, 2003).
Activities condition other activities and the architecture can be of cross-‐
sectional nature – tightly linked and complementary – (Porter, 1996; Siggelkow,
2001) or longitudinal nature – path dependent – (Ghemawat, 1991; Teece &
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Pisano, 1994; Wernerfelt, 1984). Internal fit among activities ensures that the
business model has a coherent organizing of activities, while external fit refers to
the appropriateness of the configuration of activities given the environmental
conditions affecting the business model. Fit among the activities in the business
model is of crucial importance to the firm since environmental changes can affect
the external and/or the internal fit (Siggelkow, 2001), which in turn will affect the
business model architecture and the resources employed. Positions built on
activity systems are far more sustainable than those built on individual activities.
Business models, by their very nature, are difficult to untangle from outside the
firm and therefore hard to imitate.
Fit among business model components means that poor performance in one
component will degrade the performance in others, so that weaknesses are
exposed and more prone to get attention. Conversely, improvements in one
component of the activity system will pay dividends in others (Ghemawat &
Levinthal, 2008; Porter, 1996). Higher value creation and appropriation grows out
of the entire system of activities (Zott & Amit, 2010). The competitive value of
individual activities, resources and/or their organizing cannot be decoupled from
the business model, which emphasizes the importance of the system-‐level design
of business models, as opposed to partial optimization of a particular activity
(Porter, 1996; Santos et al., 2009; Zott & Amit, 2010).
2.3.3 Normative perspective: Business models as models
The normative perspective takes a conceptual and taxonomical approach.
Researchers applying this perspective represent business models through textual,
verbal, and graphical representations (Amit & Zott, 2002; Baden-‐Fuller & Morgan,
2010; Weill & Vitale, 2001), provide a business model ontology, which appears to
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be a formalization of a list of elements the business model should consist of, as
well as the underlying relationships, vocabulary, and semantics of a business
model (Osterwalder, 2004). Such ontological formalization and conceptualization
is structured into multiple levels of decomposition with increasing depth and
complexity (Johnson et al. 2008; Morris et al., 2005; Teece, 2010). The normative
perspective implies bounds on what building blocks constitute a complete
business model and considers a priori business model elements and categories. It
offers guidance on the creation of new business models and allows the
comparison of different business models along the conceptual framework
consisting of specified individual elements. It provides a static view of the business
model and does not consider interaction and dynamics between the individual
elements. The business model acts as a conceptual framework, serves prescriptive
functions, and provides useful standards to evaluate the form, completeness, and
tightness of specific elements of the business model.
Rooted in the theory of the firm as bureaucracy (Weber, 1969) and driven by
scholars who emphasize the model aspect in the business model (Osterwalder &
Pigneur, 2002) the conceptualizations refer to the way a firm conducts business.
They intend to reduce the complexity to an understandable level proposing meta-‐
models that consist of elements and relationships that reflect the complex entities
that they aim to describe. Here, the main role of the business model is to find and
design a promising business concept (Delmar & Shane, 2003; Johnson et al., 2008;
Morris et al., 2006; Osterwalder et al., 2005) based on “the job that needs to be
done” in a particular market (Eyring, Johanson, & Nair, 2011). Having a business
model conceptualization at hand that describes the essential building blocks and
their relationships makes it easier for the firm to design and operationalize a
business model. Equally, when a firm decides to adopt a new business model or
change an existing one, capturing and visualizing this model improves planning,
change and implementation (Petrovic, Kittl, & Teksten, 2001). The business model
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design determines the identity of market segments to be targeted, the benefit the
firm will deliver to the customer, the technologies and features that are to be
embedded in the product and service, how the revenue and cost structure of a
business is to be designed to meet customer needs, the way in which technologies
are to be assembled and offered to the customer, and the mechanisms and
manner by which value is to be captured, and competitive advantage sustained
(Gambardella & McGahan, 2010; Teece, 2010).
In the next section we advance our conceptual framework and elaborate on
how the three perspectives on business models interpret and incorporate value
creation, appropriation and capture, as well as value slippage, as mechanisms of
the business model concept.
2.4 The Notion of Value Creation and Value Capture
2.4.1 Strategic perspective
Value creation. Viewed from the strategic perspective, value creation is
driven by the internal fit among the choices and the external fit with the
environment (Siggelkow, 2001, Ghemawat & Levinthal, 2008) and emerges from
four distinct value drivers: alignment to goal (choices delivering consequences that
move the firm towards achieving its goals and objectives), reinforcement (choices
complementing each other and creating internal consistency), virtuousness
(presence of positive feedback loops that strengthen business model elements),
and robustness (ability of the business model to sustain effectiveness over time).
Virtuousness refers to a dynamic version of reinforcement and internal
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consistency since business models creating virtuous cycles that lead to better
fulfillment of objectives imply growth, which occurs when rigid consequences
directly related to goals become stronger with every iteration. Virtuous cycles help
the firm to create increased value over time (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010).
Vicious cycles, on the hand, have the opposite effect and diminish value created.
Value appropriation. Value appropriation, on the other hand, is determined
and increased by identifying threats to the isolating mechanisms that prevent
value slippage through competitors’ replication of the focal firm’s business model
and hence increase the potential of value appropriation. One of the main threats
to the business model that reduces value appropriation ability of the firm is
imitation (Ghemawat, 1991). The barrier to imitation is strong when rigid
consequences are part of virtuous cycles that spin quickly. Reinforcement is
another barrier to imitation since a competitor intending to replicate the business
model must copy many choices simultaneously for them to have a comparable
effect to that observed in the focal firm (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010). The
pure complexity of a business model serves as a barrier and increases the firm’s
value appropriation potential. Causal ambiguity may lead imitators to wrong
choices and deficient imitation.
Another threat reducing value appropriation potential of the firm is holdup.
Holdup refers to members of the firm’s value network capturing value created by
the focal firm through the exercise of bargaining power. Organizational
complacency is a threat to robustness, which a firm can protect itself against by
the right mix of business model choices addressing incentives. With wrong
incentives value created by the firm can slip away to the employees who receive a
greater share than deserved. Substitution refers to decreased value perceived by
customers because of the presence of other products, which leads to lower value
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appropriation and lower value capture (Ghemawat, 1991; Casadesus-‐Masanell &
Ricart, 2010).
2.4.2 Organizational perspective
Value creation. Business models as activity systems create value through
configurations of activities, resources, and linkages. Value is created through
activities that affect the value of resources, leading to their appreciation or
depreciation (Jacobides et al., 2006); by leveraging resources and activities in the
business model and investing in external strategic resources (Jacobides et al.,
2006; Sirmon et al., 2007); and by opening up the business model to external
innovation activities (Chesbrough, 2007b; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002).
Activities and resources as the elements of the business model are organized in
ways to complement one another and create real economic value. Fit among the
elements is crucial source of value creation (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a). The
transformation of opportunities into a distinctive value proposition for the
customer, stakeholders, and the value network is determined by the internal and
external fit of the resources and activities and their organization in the business
model.
Zott and Amit (2010) introduce such fit among activities and resources as
business model design themes, which orchestrate and connect the selection of
activities, structure and governance in form of novelty (adoption of new activities,
new ways of linking activities, or new ways of governing activities),
complementarities (bundling of activities within the business model creates more
value than independent activities), efficiency (reduction of transaction costs), or
lock-‐in (switching costs, network externalities that derive from the business model
architecture) with the objective to increase value creation for the focal firm and
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the firm’s stakeholders within the value network. The four value creation drivers
are mutually reinforcing; that is, the presence of each value driver can enhance
the effectiveness of any other value source (Amit & Zott, 2001). The business
model does not involve a linear mechanism for value creation from suppliers to
the firm to its customers; rather it is determined by a complex, interlinked and
interdependent set of exchange relationships and activities among multiple
stakeholders (Zott et al., 2011).
Value appropriation. Value appropriation also depends on the firm’s unique
strategic resources, capabilities, activities and their organizing (Chesbrough &
Rosenbloom, 2002; Svejenova et al., 2010). The four defined drivers of value
creation implicitly act as enablers of higher value appropriation. The better the fit
among the activity system elements, the stronger is the value creation ability of
the firm, and the stronger is the ability of the focal firm to appropriate more value.
Value appropriation depends on factors such as switching costs of other business
model stakeholders, the firm’s ability to control information, the ability of other
stakeholders to take unified action vis-‐à-‐vis the focal firm, and the replacement
costs of other stakeholders (Zott & Amit, 2007). In the context of innovation, value
appropriation is about protecting and leveraging that innovation (Jacobides et al.,
2006), while in the open innovation context, value appropriation is about opening
the business model by actively searching for and exploiting external ideas and by
allowing unused internal technologies to flow to the market and create new
revenue streams which contribute to value appropriation (Almirall & Casadesus-‐
Masanell, 2010; Chesbrough, 2007a).
Internal and external fit (Siggelkow, 2001) among activities increases value
appropriation and reduces the risk of value slippage, where part of the value
created is captured by third parties (Lepak et al., 2007). Value is destroyed if an
activity is overdesigned or underdesigned for its use (Porter, 1996). A business
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model with many interacting activities and resources and strong linkages is
difficult to understand and replicate, imitate or substitute (Ghemawat, 1991),
which increases the focal firm’s ability to appropriate more of the value. Changing
the scope of the activity system not only affects the extent to which it can capture
the value created; but also the extent to which it can be innovative in the future
(Itami & Nishino, 2010; Jacobides et al., 2006).
2.4.3 Normative perspective
Value creation. Viewed from the normative perspective, value creation is a
key component of the business model design. It describes how the firm’s theory
on how to compete is put into action by focusing on the organization and
architecture of the firm that creates and delivers the value proposition
(Richardson, 2008). The value creation process is concerned with the question
what problem needs to be solved or what need should be fulfilled for the target
customers. The offerings satisfy the problem or fulfill the need, but the firm must
further define how the offerings are being sold and to who (Johnson et al., 2008).
The sub-‐elements offer guidance as on what building blocks contribute to the
value creation processes and what aspects should the firm consider when
designing a business model (Johnson et al., 2008; Nunes & Breene, 2011; Teece,
2010). Consistency, reinforcement and comprehension of the business model
elements are the main value drivers viewed from the normative perspective.
Inconsistency can manifest itself both in terms of poor fit among decision areas
within a given component as well as the fit between components.
Value appropriation. With respect to value appropriation, the business
model articulates a viable structure of revenues and costs for the firm delivering
value. The frameworks on business models put forward by the normative
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perspective emphasize the importance of an aligned profit formula consisting of a
revenue model, a cost and margin structure (Johnson et al., 2008; Morris et al.,
2005; Richardson, 2008), and a commercialization strategy (Teece, 2010) which
implicitly implies value capture, revenue generation, as the main focus of the
business model. Thus, viewed from the normative perspective, the core element
of the firm’s business model is its economic model (Linder & Cantrell, 2000). The
economic model provides a consistent logic for earning profits. Value capture in
normative frameworks focuses on economic sub-‐components that provide
coherent logic for earning revenue and profits, such as: operating leverage or the
extent to which the cost structure is dominated by fixed versus variable costs; the
firm’s emphasis on higher or lower volumes in terms of both the market
opportunity and internal capacity; the firm’s ability to achieve relatively higher or
lower margins; and the firm’s revenue model, including the flexibility of revenue
sources and prices (Morris et al., 2005; Osterwalder & Pigneur, 2002; Richardson,
2008).
An element of the business model that plays a crucial role in the process of
value appropriation is the revenue model. While the business model allows the
firm to transform business opportunities into value creation, the revenue model
represents the firm’s strategic intent and determines how much of the total value
the firm can capture (Itami & Nishino, 2009). A revenue model refers to the
specific modes in which a business model enables revenue generation. In the
normative perspective, the business model design is concentrated on the value
capture method of the firm (Magretta, 2002; Teece, 2010).
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2.5 Discussion
We have presented the business model as a crucial concept in management
literature. The purpose of this paper was to distinguish different foundations and
roots of business model conceptualizations prevailing in current research and
identify commonalities among researchers’ views, analyses and perspectives with
the objective to contribute to greater clarity on the concept and extant research
on business models. The review of received literature allows us to understand the
existent ambiguity and diversity of the business model concept, the sources of
differences but also commonalities and shared perspectives in business model
conceptualizations that act as a catalyst toward more convergence in the research
of business models. Our review of extant literature summarized in Tables 2.2a-‐e
shows that research on business models has developed in isolated fashion within
silos, according to the phenomena of interest of the researchers and their
respective viewpoints, in different contexts, and on different levels of analysis.
This lack of definitional and conceptual consistency promotes dispersion
rather than convergence thereby impeding cumulative research progress on
business models (Zott et al., 2010). However, the research summarized in Tables
2.2a-‐e also indicates an implicit consensus of the business model as a new unit of
analysis that spans traditional levels of analysis; of the meaning, role, and outcome
of the business model as the core logic of how the firm operates indicating a
holistic approach toward explaining how firms conduct business, how value is
created for the firms’ stakeholders, and how firms appropriate and capture part of
the value created; of how choices, activities and resources, their organizing, and
business model elements play a crucial role in the definitions of the business
model. Further, we identify sources of commonalities and consistency in
definitions and conceptualizations, indicating a move toward convergence in
business model research.
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Based on the literature synthesis, we develop a theoretical model of the
different levels of business model conceptualizations. Together the three
perspectives offer a comprehensive view of the business model and allow space
for interpretation of the concept by different schools of thought. The perspectives
are not independent and exclusive, but rather they complement each other. In all
three perspectives, the business model acts as a design of organizational
structures to enact a business opportunity and transform it into a distinct value
proposition (George & Bock, 2011; Svejenova et al., 2010; Teece, 2010), thereby
transcend the firm and span its boundaries (Zott & Amit, 2010). There is an implicit
consensus among the three perspectives of the meaning and role of the business
model as the core logic of how the firm operates, how it creates value for its
stakeholders, and how it allows the firm to appropriate and capture part of the
value created (Amit & Zott, 2001; Anderson & Markides, 2007; Chesbrough, 2010;
Johnson, Christensen, & Kagermann, 2008; Mitchell & Coles, 2003, 2004;
Svejenova et al., 2010; Teece, 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010). The differences exist in
the various conceptual approaches, theoretical roots, antecedents and the level of
analysis scholars apply.
From the review of received literature we have identified three perspectives
on business models prevailing in current research as presented in Table 2.3: the
strategic perspective, which views the business model as a set of choices, the
organizational perspective, which views the business model as an activity system,
and the normative perspective, which views the business model as a model of the
firm. Together they offer a comprehensive view of the business model and allow
space for interpretation of the concept by different schools of thought. The
perspectives are not independent and exclusive, but rather they complement each
other. In all three perspectives, the business model acts as a design of
organizational structures to enact a business opportunity and transform it into a
distinct value proposition (George & Bock, 2011; Svejenova et al., 2010; Teece,
66 | Page
2010), thereby transcend the firm and span its boundaries (Zott & Amit, 2010).
Table 2.3 further illustrates that there is an implicit consensus among the three
perspectives of the meaning and role of the business model as the core logic of
how the firm operates, how it creates value for its stakeholders, and how it allows
the firm to appropriate and capture part of the value created.
The differences exist in the various conceptual approaches, theoretical roots,
antecedents and the level of analysis scholars apply. Figure 2.1 below summarizes
the relations and presents the conceptual model on the three perspectives on
business model research. Derived from the strategic level of analysis in past
research, the strategic perspective views the business model as the reflection of
strategy, makes fit among choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Ghemawat
& Levinthal, 2008) the core driver, and emphasizes value appropriation in the
conceptualizations. It is rooted in the research stream on competitive strategy
examining positioning of firms in product markets and has the nature of
competition through different business models at its core. The organizational
perspective, derived from the organizational level of analysis, enriches the pure
strategy focus with organization design aspects and views the activities and
resources configurations in the business model as the architectural backbone of
the firm (Shafer et al., 2005) with fit among activities as a crucial aspect of value
creation (Siggelkow, 2001). The strategic and organizational perspectives both
imply dynamics in the business model concept and are closely related since the
choices a firm makes influence the firm’s architecture, activities and resources
configuration.
While viewed from the strategic perspective the dynamics in the business
model occur through the feedback loops between choices and their
consequences, thereby creating virtuous or vicious cycles, the organizational
perspective conceptualizes the dynamics in the business model as the continuous
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interdependence and interaction between the activities and resources. These
cycles and interactions, when aligned with the firm’s goals, reinforce value
creation and appropriation and thus the competitive advantage (Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2011). Identified from the operational level of analysis, the
normative perspective, in turn, conceptualizes the business model as a static
concept and places the focus on the application of the business model.
Researchers applying this perspective represent business models through textual,
verbal, and graphical representations (Amit & Zott, 2002; Weill & Vitale, 2001),
provide a business model ontology, which appears to be a formalization of a list of
elements the business model should consist of, as well as the underlying
relationships, vocabulary, and semantics of a business model (Osterwalder, 2004).
Such ontological formalization and conceptualization is structured into multiple
levels of decomposition with increasing depth and complexity, whereby value
capture is the main focus (Johnson et al. 2008; Morris et al., 2005; Teece, 2010).
Figure 2.1: Three perspectives on business model conceptualization
Source: Own creation
The identified perspectives capture a broad range of theoretical
assumptions regarding antecedents, drivers, and mechanisms of value creation
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and appropriation, and increase the precision with which scholars can explore the
nature, mechanisms, and outcomes of value creation, appropriation and capture
of business models. The choices a firm makes are directed at value creation,
hence, the strategic perspective emphasizes fit among the choices as the main
value driver, while value appropriation of the firm is increased by creating barriers
against the threats to isolating mechanisms (Ghemawat, 1991; Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2010). The organizational perspective suggests design themes
(Amit & Zott, 2001), as determined by the interaction and fit among activities, as
the source of value creation (Santos et al., 2009; Svejenova et al., 2010; Zott &
Amit, 2010), while value appropriation is driven by a firm’s unique strategic
resources, capabilities, activities and their organizing, and position in which it
enjoys a competitive advantage (Zott & Amit, 2010). The normative perspective
stresses the consistency and reinforcement of the business model ontology and
the components as building blocks as the main sources of value creation since
inconsistency leads to suboptimal business model design and diminishing value
creation ability by the firm (Morris et al., 2005 Osterwalder et al., 2005). The
revenue model is explicitly put forward as crucial element of the business model
to capture value, consisting of the profit model, cost and margin structure, as well
as velocity of resources (Johnson et al., 2008).
Despite the plethora of its meanings, business model theory-‐building and
empirical research appears to develop from established management topics such
as strategic choice, resource accumulation, activity systems, and strategic planning
(George & Bock, 2011). It is the interplay between different points of view and
levels of analysis that allows for a more comprehensive understanding of business
models because any one definition invariably offers only a partial account of a
complex concept. The juxtaposition of different theoretical perspectives brings
into focus contrasting and complementary views of the business model construct.
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Based on this research, we propose differentiating between two cognitive
views that characterize business model conceptualizations: agentic view and
determined view. The agentic view refers to the business model as a complement
to strategy and defines it as a system of activities determined by strategic choices
and their fit, thereby implying its dynamics and ability to change and evolve over
time. The determined view, by contrast, is prescriptive and sees the business
model concept as a static model of the firm, defines it by its ontology of a priori
defined elements, and considers it as restricting strategy. Here, only the business
model as a model is allowed to exist next to the concept of strategy. The two
views are operationalized with different theories of the firm, definitions and
assumptions, types of shared stories, symbols and forms of engagement of the
business model with its stakeholders. Yet, our argument is that both views are
necessary to advance research in business models.
Working out the relationships between such seemingly divergent views and
definitions provides opportunities to develop new theory that has stronger and
broader explanatory power of the business model concept. Given the vibrancy and
breadth of interest in business model research in management science, the
paper’s main contribution is to provide coherence to the growing field of research
on business models and makes this essay particularly timely. Proposing the
business model as a unit of analysis and a potential source of competitive
advantage, I seek to create interest in future research on business models.
2.6 Avenues for Future Research
The business model is a multifaceted phenomenon that cuts across many
disciplinary boundaries as we have learnt from extant literature. Empirical
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researchers argue that the inability to agree upon common definitions hampers
the research progress (Gartner, 1985a; Vesper, 1983). The phenomenon of the
business model is intertwined with a complex set of contiguous and overlapping
constructs in management science, such as strategy, revenue model, strategic
planning, innovation, and many others. Table 2.4 below presents distinct concepts
on business models and illustrates what is not a business model.
As a next consequent step, future research should focus on the analysis of
discriminant validity of the business model concept and demonstrate that the
concept is sufficiently different from other related concepts of value creation and
appropriation used in management research. The objective should be to
determine the business model boundaries, as opposed to firm boundaries (Santos
& Eisenhardt, 2005), and develop a convergent construct that will reduce
confusion and help reconcile conflicting empirical results in business model
research. Because of the range of approaches available for the study of business
models, some common ground is needed upon which to synthesize the insights of
diverse approaches of inquiry.
First, there is a need for an overall, common purpose that will forge some
unity among research on business models. Past research either lacks clarity of
purpose or the specified purpose is of little consequence. It is confined largely to
reporting the occurrence of business models with little attempt to uncover causal
relationships. The failure to clearly specify the purpose of the research combined
with the lack of common ground for synthesizing research findings and proposing
generalizations does hinder the progress in business model research. The field will
advance if a more specific purpose of research is explicitly linked to a more
fundamental, overall purpose such as explaining and facilitating the role of the
business model in creating and appropriating value. This fundamental purpose is
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wide in scope yet delineates boundaries of inquiry within which multi-‐disciplinary
research may be built.
Table 2.4: What is not a business model
Source: Own creation
Further, future research on business models will benefit from the
specification of theoretical fundaments. Scholars recognize that the business
model is an integrative concept with various theoretical underpinnings that unifies
aspects of value creation and appropriation from different fields and theories
rather than considering the business model concept as an isolated theory of value
creation and appropriation. However, the theoretical development in business
model research is still weak. How do business models exist? Do they exist in the
particular or in the general? Future research should consider additional theoretical
Concept different from a business model Study Domain
Balanced scorecard Kaplan & Norton (1992) Strategy
Marketing model or strategy Timmers (1998) Internet / IS
Strategy maps Kaplan & Norton (2000) Strategy
Network structure Tapscott et al. (2000) Internet / IS
Revenue model / Cost structure Amit & Zott (2001); Dubosson-Torbay et al. (2002)
Internet / IS
Pricing model / pricing strategy Rappa (2001) Internet / IS
Technology Chesbrough & Rosenbloom (2002) Technology
Business processes Osterwalder & Pigneur (2002); Shafer et al. (2005)
Internet / IS; Strategy
Network innovation / Open innovation Chesbrough (2003); Miles et al. (2006) Technology
Market adoption strategy Ojala & Tyrväinene (2006) Strategy
Management teams Patzelt et al. (2008) Technology
Corporate strategy Richardson (2008) Strategy
Product market strategy / Business strategy Richardson (2008); Zott & Amit (2008) Strategy
Policy Johnson & Suskewicz (2009) Technology
Incentive system / mechanisms / policies Casadesus-Masanell & Ricart (2010) Strategy
Senior leadership team processes and structures Smith et al. (2010) Strategy
Value Proposition Dubosson-Torbay et al. (2002) Internet / IS
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perspectives, avoid unstated assumptions and instead carefully examine and
clearly state theoretical assumptions, propositions and hypotheses, which can
then be tested and elaborated on with the objective to advance theory
development in the research field. In the same line of thought, future research
should focus more on systematic studies and research designs that develop a
priori hypotheses, subject to formal testing, and work toward a coherent
development of theory. Future methodologies should be less descriptive and
instead more explanatory, theory driven, and consisting of multiple methods.
2.7 Conclusion
This paper opens up new possibilities for seeing and appreciating the
different pathways to business model conceptualization. In this paper, we have
synthesized research pertaining to the business model construct and developed
the logic of three different perspectives on business model conceptualization
identified from past research. We provided a conceptual framework to help
understand the business model concept and its core logic of value creation and
appropriation through the lenses of the three perspectives. Given the vibrancy and
breadth of interest in business model research in management science, the
proposed conceptual framework brings coherence to the growing field of research
on business models and makes this paper particularly timely. Proposing the
business model as a unit of analysis and a potential source of competitive
advantage, we seek to create interest in future research on business models.
“Strategy has been the primary building block of competitiveness over the past
three decades, but in the future, the quest for sustainable advantage may well
begin with the business model” (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2011: 101).
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Chapter 3: How Do Firms Adapt to an Evolving
Ecosystem? The Case of Business Model
Innovation in the German Dental Industry.
In this article we respond to recent calls in the strategic management
literature for novel research on the intersection of business models and
ecosystems. Employing a grounded theory approach, we theorize and identify four
firm-‐level antecedents of business model innovation, namely goal to value
capture, specialization, concentration, and environmental constraints, which lead
to value innovation through business model innovation. We further explore how
value innovation acts as the adaptation trajectory to an evolving ecosystem. We
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highlight that progress in business model innovation is greatest if the multiple
antecedents advance together as they are interdependent and mutually
reinforcing. Inductively drawing from in-‐depth analysis of dental service providers
in Germany, the article proposes a model of antecedents and outcomes of
business model innovation. In our research we emphasize the challenges of
business model innovation in a service industry setting.
3.1 Introduction
In recent years, business models did not only catch substantial attention
from practitioners (Lindgardt et al., 2009; Pohle & Chapman, 2006) but they have
also gained momentum in academic research (DaSilva & Trkman, 2014; Schneider
& Spieth, 2013; Zott et al., 2011). In its broadest sense the business model is found
to communicate the core logic of the firm (Teece, 2010), constitute the firm’s
architectural backbone (Shafer, Smith, & Linder, 2005), and act as critical construct
for understanding the firm’s value creation and capture mechanisms (Amit & Zott,
2001; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002;
Magretta, 2002; Svejenova, Planellas, & Vives, 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010). The
majority of research has taken a rather static view on business models (Zott et al.,
2011), discounting the fact that a business model may evolve over time, be subject
to change, and thus, should be depicted as a dynamic concept (Demil & Lecocq,
2010; Morris, Schindehutte, & Allen, 2005; Spieth, Schneckenberg, & Ricart, 2014;
Sosna, Trevinyo-‐Rodríguez, & Velamuri, 2010).
Further, rapidly changing ecosystems (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Zhu, 2013;
Teece, 2010) force firms to adapt to new conditions and innovate their business
models in order to exploit new market opportunities. Such development can be
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game changing as it shifts the rules of competitive rivalry in an ecosystem
(Markides, 2008). Therefore, questions about the antecedents, trajectories and
outcome of business model innovation, as well as the adaptation to evolving
ecosystems, are of utter importance especially when considering the significant
performance consequences of business model innovation (Markides, 2006; Pohle
& Chapman, 2006; Zott & Amit, 2007) and its acknowledgement in research as a
key source of competitive advantage (Baden-‐Fuller & Morgan, 2010; Björkdahl,
2009; Chesbrough, 2007a; Comes & Berniker, 2008; Hamel, 2000; McGrath, 2010;
Mitchell & Coles, 2003; Teece, 2010; Venkatraman & Henderson, 2008).
While research on agile small and medium enterprises (SMEs), start-‐ups, as
well as large multinationals that combine innovative business models with
technological innovation in fast-‐moving, highly competitive ecosystems enriched
our understanding of the value creation and value appropriation potential through
business model innovation (Amit & Zott, 2012; Zott & Amit, 2007, 2008, 2010), our
understanding of the antecedents, trajectories, outcome of business model
innovation and their adaptation to service-‐driven ecosystems with relatively low
rate of technological innovation, high extent of complexity and regulations, low
levels of competition and economically recession-‐proved idiosyncrasies remains
scarce. The objective of this paper is to participate in closing this identified
research gap by extending the theoretical milestones of business models through
the examination of business model innovation antecedents and adaptation
trajectories of complex service providers in such challenging ecosystems that host
them. The German dental care industry, for instance, represents one such
challenging and underexplored setting of complex service providers.
Two important characteristics of the dental care industry make it an
interesting context for our study of business model innovation and ecosystem
adaptation. First, the German dental care industry was depicted by a high
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dispersion of small, individual, personal dental practices, named after the resident
practitioner, offering an unconsolidated market opportunity. However, during the
past ten years the landscape of dental practices in Germany has been changing
significantly. Suddenly, large and anonymous dental practices and large centers
appear on the horizon. This observed phenomenon of an institutional change from
small personal dental practices to large anonymous centers and its subsequent
consequences indicate a significant change in the ecosystem of dental service
providers. Second, in general, the dental profession by nature is defined as very
service intensive. Very little research exists that describes the complexity of the
dental industry and the relationship between the stakeholders and the dental
professional. Researchers describe the dental profession as monopolistic as its
market behavior reflects a simple monopolistic model because the dental service
providers act in their own interests instead of those of their consumers (Kushman
& Scheffler, 1978; Kushman, Scheffler, Miners, & Mullers, 1978).
Against this background we build grounded theory and ask the following
research questions: (1) What are the antecedents that enable the service providers
to engage in business model innovation? (2) How do the service providers adapt
their business models to an evolving ecosystem?
With this research we follow a call by Demil et al. (2015) who explicitly stress
out the need for further research focusing on business model innovation and
change process in established firms. Additionally, our research also sheds light on
“how path dependency constraints future changes in a business model” (DaSilva &
Trkman, 2014, p. 387) and by attending to the question also pointed out by
George and Bock (2011, p. 85) that “… questions of business model path
dependence remain unresolved”. To answer these under-‐explored research
questions, we applied an inductive, theory-‐building approach relying on methods
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that prescribe iterating between theory and data. Given that little research exists
about the antecedents of business model innovation on the firm-‐level and the
adaptation of the business model to the evolving ecosystem, we believe this topic
will benefit from a qualitative research design (Eisenhardt, 1989; Eisenhardt &
Graebner, 2007) to build testable mid-‐range theory from rich and replicable
evidence. Multiple, comparative case studies allow for replication logic and result
in an enriched understanding of the dynamics at play (Yin, 1994).
Indeed, by analyzing a set of 147 dental practices in Germany 10 years after
the introduction of the last major health reforms and data from overall 90
interviews, 10 in-‐depth case-‐studies, as well as secondary data, overall we deduce
that business model innovation acts as an enabler of the focal service firm to
adapt to the evolving ecosystem and is driven by increasing concentration of
relations among actors, increased specialization of core activities, and value
mechanisms of goal to value capture and value creation. Further, we postulate
that environmental constraints of the evolving ecosystem also act as an
antecedent to business model innovation thereby creating a reinforcing loop.
Based on our research findings we develop a unique conceptual model for further
empirical testing.
The study aims to make several contributions. To the best of our knowledge
this is the first paper to empirically examine the antecedents of business model
innovation at the firm-‐level, thereby complementing research on innovation that
emphasizes factors of innovation on the individual level. We hereby also
contribute to institutional theory by presenting the identified antecedents of
business model innovation as a mechanism leading to an institutional change in
the ecosystem of service providers. We further contribute to the literature on
business models and strategy by highlighting the central role of business model
innovation in value appropriation and the need for specialization and
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concentration of different actors in the ecosystem. In our focus on business model
innovation, we emphasize firms’ orchestration of internal and external activities to
enact opportunities of value creation and appropriation whether they are
discovered or created. We further respond to recent calls in the strategic
management literature for the integration of the business model and ecosystem
dimensions (Zott & Amit, 2013) by providing a more systemic perspective that
emphasizes the interdependencies and complementarities between a firm and its
stakeholders within the ecosystem. We also emphasize the need for research in
the service industry setting.
The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. The next section reviews
the relevant literature on the theoretical underpinnings of the business model
concept, business model innovation research, ecosystems, and antecedents of
innovation identified in past research. It is followed by a description of the dental
industry in Germany and its pertinence as an interesting research setting for the
study of business model innovation of complex service providers. A subsequent
section on methodology outlines the research method, the sample and data
collection and the data analysis. We then report our findings and present a
conceptual model for further empirical testing. We conclude by drawing
implications to theory and practice and offering directions for further research.
3.2 Theoretical Background
Business models have been integral to trading and economic behavior since
pre-‐classical times (Teece, 2010). Introduced by Peter Drucker in 1954 (Drucker,
1954), the business model concept became common with the advent of the
Internet in the mid 1990s (Magretta, 2002). Despite a conceptual pluralism that
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has uncovered novel ways to explain what business models are and how they
work, a standard definition of this concept has not been developed yet (Bowien &
Vives, 2013; George & Bock, 2011; Spieth et al., 2014; Wirtz et al., 2015; Zott et al.,
2011). However, a consensus emerged that business models provide an
understanding of how firms do business through the mechanisms of value creation
and value delivery to stakeholders (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; DaSilva &
Trkman, 2014), as well as the capture of the value generated (Chesbrough, 2007a;
Teece, 2010).
Scholars broadly agree on the activity-‐system perspective of the business
model in which the business model depicts a system of interdependent activities
performed by the focal firm and the stakeholders in its ecosystem, as well as the
mechanisms that orchestrate the activities. Hereby an activity in the focal firm’s
business model describes the employment of human, physical, and capital
resources of any stakeholder to the business model (Zott & Amit, 2010). The firm’s
business model as an activity system, depicting the design elements of content,
structure, and governance of activities, may transcend the focal firm and span its
boundaries, but it will always remain firm-‐centric to enable the focal firm to create
value with its stakeholders but also to capture a share of the value created itself
through the exploitation of business opportunities (Amit & Zott, 2001; Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Pisano & Teece, 2007;
Svejenova et al., 2010; Teece, 2007; Zott & Amit, 2010).
Building on the activity-‐system view of the business model, we follow the
definition of business model innovation as describing the design and
implementation of an activity system that is new to the market in which the focal
firm competes and/or new to the focal firm (Amit & Zott, 2012; Snihur & Zott,
2014). In this context, elaborating on Amit and Zott (2012), business model
innovation is depicted as a new activity system, which refers to ‘new’ in terms of
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content, structure and/or governance; that is, a new activity system is designed by
adding, changing, or eliminating: (a) some or all of the existing activities common
to other firms in the industry (change of content), (b) some or all of the linkages
between the activities or linking the activities in novel ways (change of structure),
and (c) one or more parties performing the activities (change in governance).
Business model innovation involves changes at the system level and can be
implemented by established and new firms alike. Radical business model
innovation involves the change of at least two design elements of the business
model, which leads to novelty at the entire activity system level. The more radical
business model innovation is the more wide-‐ranging are the activity system level
changes. Incremental business model innovation, on the other hand, involves
changes in only one design element, which leads to only incremental change of an
activity system and does not necessarily imply novelty at the activity system level
(Amit & Zott, 2012; Sinhur & Zott, 2014). Because of the interdependencies and
interconnections of the activities of a business model, changes in one or more
design elements may entail further changes within the business model and lead to
changes in functionalities.
Scholars agree that business model innovation can be viewed as a new type
of organizational innovation (Zott et al., 2011), enabling firms to enact
opportunities for creating and capturing value whether they are discovered or
created (Bock, Opsahl, George, & Gann, 2012; Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010).
Extant research contributions on business model innovation center around diverse
aspects such as business model innovation as strategic change (Doz & Kosonen,
2010), risks associated with new business models (Girotra & Netessine, 2011),
general barriers to business model innovation (Bouchikhi & Kimberly, 2003;
Chesbrough, 2010), notion of business model innovation in the broad context of
sustainability (Massa & Tucci, 2013), structure and the challenges associated with
the business model innovation process (Frankenberger, Weiblen, Csik, &
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Gassmann, 2013), business model innovation as part of firms’ intellectual property
(Bonakdar, 2015; Desyllas & Sako, 2012; Rappa, 2001; Rivette & Kline, 2000; Zott
et al. 2011), business model innovation as a dynamic managerial capability (Amit &
Zott, 2014), path dependency of business model innovation (Laudien & Daxböck,
2015), as well as links between business model innovation and technology
innovation (Chesbrough 2010; Gambardella & McGahan. 2010). Extant literature,
however, is silent on the antecedents of business model innovation.
Research elaborating on the idea of ecosystems claims that the success of an
innovating firm often depends on the activities performed by third parties in its
environment (Adner & Kapoor, 2010; Power & Jerjian, 2001). An ecosystem is “the
community of organizations, institutions, and individuals that impact the
enterprise and the enterprise’s customers and suppliers” (Teece, 2009: 16). It is
within such ecosystem that the competitive game unfolds, involving multiple
players that differ in strategies, capabilities and resources. Thus, the concept of
the ecosystem is closely related to the business model because it is also boundary-‐
spanning and adopts a systemic perspective that emphasizes interdependencies
and complementarities between a firm and its stakeholders in order to properly
understand how value is created and captured. However, as opposed to the
business model concept, the ecosystem is not firm-‐centric and not anchored on a
focal firm. This implies that different firms with different business models can
share the same ecosystem (Zott & Amit, 2013).
3.3 Research Setting: The German Dental Industry
To understand the antecedents of business model innovation of dental
practices in Germany as well as their adaptation to an evolving ecosystem, a brief
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account of the German dental industry and the ecosystem is necessary. Overall,
dentistry – the dental profession – in general can be defined as the branch of
medicine that is involved in the study, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of
diseases, disorders and conditions of the oral cavity, commonly in the dentition
but also the oral mucosa, and of adjacent and related structures and tissues,
particularly in the maxillofacial (jaw and facial) area (American Dental Association,
2014). The ecosystem of the dental service providers in Germany consists of
several main players. On the supply side, dental service providers are well
organized and integrated. Through their different local, state, and national
associations dentists try to influence laws, standards, and industry behaviors by
lobbying for policies that benefit the profession and its members (Lipscomb &
Douglass, 1982). Dental technical labs, as other participants in the ecosystem,
work closely with the dentists and produce dentures required for treatment. They
act as an intersection between manufacturers and suppliers of dental technology
and dentists in the dentures treatment.
On the demand side, patients constitute another important group of the
German dental ecosystem. Dental providers segment their patients based on
patients’ willingness to invest in their dental treatment and their teeth. It is very
important to distinguish this type of segmentation from patients’ socio-‐economic
and income levels or possibilities to pay for treatment. Patients who have the
explicit desire to invest in their teeth receive more time and attention by the
dentists and consequently better and more dedicated service. On the other hand,
patients who are not willing to invest in their dental treatment the their dental
health, despite high-‐income levels and/or good health plans, receive less time and
less attention by their dentist and consequently they receive only standard
treatment. Patients’ willingness to invest in their teeth and their dental care is one
of the main drivers identified in the German dentistry providers’ ecosystem as it
determines the value creation for the patient and the value appropriation for the
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dentist. Patients have low bargaining power over their dentists as all prices are
based on the factoring and the rating scales provided by the public and private
health insurances to account for the appropriate fee structures. Only privately
accounted for services are subject to significant differences in fees.
The value appropriation aspect of dental practices leads to another group of
important players in the ecosystem, namely the public and the private health
insurances, which represent the institutional platform between the supply and
demand side. The German dental fee factoring system by which dentists are being
paid for the delivery of their services consists of two pillars: (a) public health
insurance, which accounts payments to the dentists for the service delivery based
on the highly regulated and institutionalized public dental health insurance fee
rating scale called BEMA (Bewertungsmaßstab zahnärztlicher Leistungen) in form
of quarterly billing; and (b) private health insurance and private add-‐on dental
insurance plans (in connection with public health insurance only), which account
the payments to the dentists for the service delivery based on its private heath
insurance fee rating scale called GOZ (Gebührenordnung für Zahnärzte). Both
dental fee regulatory rating scales prescribe in detail in respective catalogues by
what exact factors diverse treatments have to be calculated and the
corresponding prescriptions in terms of material to be used, instruments to be
applied, time a certain treatment can be accounted for, and quality standards.
There are significant differences between the public and the private dental
services fees regulatory rating scales. BEMA, however, does not include all services
and consequently does not pay all fees for the work performed. Services, which
are not included in the BEMA rating scales catalogue must be paid by the publicly
insured patients themselves, either through an add-‐on private dental plan or
privately out of the pocket. Patients have the choice if they wish to receive these
treatments privately or not. The private GOZ fee regulatory covers all services and
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treatments and requires significantly higher quality standard treatments, which
are, in turn, awarded by higher fees.
Like most areas of the healthcare industry, the field of dentistry is rapidly
changing. New technologies and innovative materials are constantly impacting the
work performed by clinicians and laboratory technicians alike, making processes
easier, materials stronger and more esthetic, and deepening the relationship
between all members of the ecosystem. Many factors influence recent trends in
the ecosystem. The first factor is the mass digitization. As more dental providers
and laboratory technicians transition to digital processes and procedures,
communication between everyone in the ecosystem becomes faster and more
critical, restorative dental outcomes more precise, and patient treatment more
effective and efficient. The second factor is the state of the economy. The German
dental industry is fairly resistant toward any economic recession
(Landeszahnärztekammer Baden-‐Württemberg, 16 June 2013). The basic premise
is that people treat their teeth no matter what economic conditions apply.
Perhaps they invest more in their teeth during flourishing times, but even during
economic recession customers still go to the dentist to treat any problems that
may occur, even though solutions may be more restorative and cost-‐effective
during such times.
Finally, the third factor impacting the ecosystem is the major shift of public
health insurance companies to push the financial bonus away from dentists
seeking ways to lower dental care costs. Dental service providers experience
pressures from all directions, and the public health insurance companies try to cut
costs on all dimensions and implement caps on treatments provided and the
corresponding fees. At the same time, dental service providers constantly look for
new and better ways to appropriate more value. While ten years ago public health
insurances paid for most of the treatments provided without many major
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restrictions, today the situation looks very different and dentists are forced to
focus more on the private health insurance regulatory (GOZ) in order to secure a
higher level of value appropriation. Thus, they try to offer more services that
account as private dentistry services. This, however, requires a different level of
quality treatment. Many dental providers continue to offer the same refined levels
of treatment like they used to in the past while their compensation, and thus their
value capture, is decreasing with their overheads remaining the same. The brief
description of the German dental ecosystem presents an evolution and implies the
necessity by dental providers to innovate their business models in order to adapt
to the changing economic environment. But the question remains what drives
their business model innovation and how do they adapt to the evolving
ecosystem.
3.4 Methodology
3.4.1 Sample selection and data collection
Given that little research exists on the antecedents of business model
innovation and the adaptation of the business model to an evolving ecosystem, we
believe this topic will benefit from a qualitative research design (Eisenhardt, 1989;
Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Yin, 2003) to build testable mid-‐range theory from
rich and replicable evidence. Moreover, prior research on business model
innovation and change often uses case studies (Bohnsack et al., 2014; Khanagha et
al., 2014; Koch, 2008, 2011; Van Driel & Dolfsma, 2009) and shows that case
studies help gain valuable insights into the research context of business model
innovation. Inductive, qualitative research is well suited for studying processes and
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“how” questions (Creswell, 1998; Langley, 1999) and is aligned with our interest in
answering our research questions on how business models of service providers
adapt their business models to the evolving ecosystem and what are the
antecedent of the business model innovation. Multiple, comparative case studies
were chosen to allow for replication logic and incite an enriched understanding of
the dynamics at play (Yin, 1994).
To comply with the aim of our research, we employed a purposeful sampling
procedure, where the dynamics of interest are more transparent (Patton, 2002;
Yin, 2009), and which in comparison to selecting cases randomly allowed us to
access information-‐rich cases from which we could discover “a great deal about
issues of central importance to the purpose of the evaluation” (Patton, 1987: 52).
In order to analyze how dental practices in Germany adapt their business models
to the evolving ecosystem we focused on incumbent as opposed to new firms.
Predicated on the assumption that firms innovate their business models in order
to adapt to an evolving environment we sampled on the outcome and studied
firms that excel in business model innovation. To identify cases of business model
innovation we sampled widely but within a confined geographical area in order to
minimize variation due to environmental factors while at the same time enabling
variation in terms of backgrounds. In a European comparison of dental service
providers, Germany excels in the field of dentistry, which offers the highest
standards of treatment and is in a recession-‐proved position
(Bundespressekonferenz, 3 March 2015).
Germany is constituted by 16 states, and we focused with our sample on the
city-‐state of Hamburg. Industry experts, top executives of the Association of the
German Dental Industry and the corresponding regional and local associations
confirmed that cases from the wider Hamburg area are representative for
Germany as the regulatory framework is national. The phenomenon observed in
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Hamburg can be observed across the rest of Germany. Specifically, we identified
dentists who are members of the regional Association of the German Dental
Industry in Hamburg. The membership is voluntary, but as it is very advantageous
for dentists to be members most dentists are members of this main association.
The association had 1.411 self-‐employed dentists as their members in 2013. Out of
the 1.411 self-‐employed dentists, we identified 1.086 individual practices (one-‐
man-‐show dental practices) and 325 collective joint practices. Out of these 325
joint dental practices we eliminated 178 joint dental practices consisting only of
two practitioners. Thus, we initially screened a total of 147 dental practices
consisting of three or more practitioners. We focused these large, collective dental
practices, as this is the phenomenon we observed in the market, namely the
transformation from individual, personal dental practices toward anonymous,
large dental practices with more than three practitioners.
We performed a second-‐step theoretical sampling, thereby relying on
theoretical rather than statistical reasons to select the most suitable cases for
further investigation (Glaser & Strauss, 1967). We followed Eisenhardt’s (1989)
advice to choose four to ten extreme cases in order to build theoretical categories
and provide polar-‐type examples of business model innovation. Multiple cases in
each category allow for replication, thereby enhancing generalizability, robustness
and reliability of results (Eisenhardt, 1989). In order to choose the extreme cases
(Eisenhardt, 1989), we first classified the remaining 147 dentistry providers into
the two categories of low and high business model innovation. Based on the
definition of business model innovation we presented, a firm is considered to be
pursuing radical business model innovation when at least two of the three design
elements of the business model (content, structure, and governance of activities)
were changed. If the dental practice merely introduced a new service or just
changed the name without any further changes, this innovation was not sufficient
to classify as business model innovation.
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In order to check our identification of the business model innovation for
robustness, we followed the increasing use of panelists in management research
(Iansiti & Clark, 1994; MacCormack, Verganti, & Iansiti, 2001; Rubio, Berg-‐Weger,
Tebb, Lee, & Rauch, 2003; Schiefer, 2014; Zott & Amit, 2007, 2008) and we
engaged four industry experts to rate the business models of our initial sample of
147 collective joint practices for their novelty by examining secondary data such as
practice websites and any other publicly available information about the business
model of each firm. The dental practices that did not fulfill the requirements of
business model innovation as per our definition were eliminated from the sample.
Following this sample design, we identified 33 extreme cases from the initial
sample of 147 collective joint dental practices with more than three practitioners.
The remaining 114 cases were classified as not having introduced any business
model innovation. Out of these 114 dental practices, 59 had changed the name of
the practice to an anonymous one, however, no change of content, structure or
governance took place. We conducted first-‐round interviews with the 33 identified
dental practices between March and October 2014. During the first round, we
conducted 33 interviews, which lasted from one to two hours and involved the
partner/owner of the dental practice. The interviews were semi-‐structured for
comparability purposes across cases and based on open-‐ended questions. Our
interview outcomes were coded with respect to their fit with the broad categories
defined in literature. During the second coding, new subcategories were allowed
to emerge. After an analysis of the first-‐round interviews, we zoomed in on ten
cases that displayed extreme variation in our sample of 33 dental practices with
respect to business model innovation.
Focusing solely on these ten selected dental service providers, we conducted
a second round of interviews between November 2014 and May 2015. In this
second round of interviews, we also included other important stakeholders for the
chosen dental practices, such as partners, employed practitioners, and top
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executives of the association familiar with the dental practices, as well as technical
labs. This approach allowed us to collect richer information and enabled us to
triangulate various data sources (Jick, 1979; Yin, 2009). The interviews during the
second round lasted between one hour and three hours. Table 3.1 below presents
the ten in-‐depth case studies and summarizes the characteristics of the dental
practices as well as their main facts and histories, incorporating a total of 57
interviews with founders and stakeholders of the ten dental practices as well as
archival data about them.
3.4.2 Data analysis
Our unit of analysis is the business model. Our chosen research design
centers on variation in the outcome (dependent variable), that is business model
innovation, followed by the subsequent analysis of the various causes (or
independent variables) that could have led to this outcome variation (Brown &
Eisenhardt, 1997; Ozcan & Eisenhardt, 2009; Snihur & Zott, 2014).
As mentioned above, we applied the case replication method, which
implies that findings from one case are replicated (or not) to either confirm or
reject the emerging theoretical insights (Eisenhardt, 1989). We iterated along
separate case history analysis, cross-‐case comparison, and cross-‐category
comparison between instances of incremental and radical business model
innovation (Eisenhardt, 1989; Miles & Huberman, 1994; Yin, 2009). Firstly, we
wrote individual case histories, describing the business model of each dental
practice based on the three theoretical business model design elements (business
model content, governance, and structure) introduced in the theory section above
and coding the emerging themes from each case. Secondly, we based these case
histories on information obtained during the interviews and personal
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observations, and accessed from archival data, as presented in Table 3.1. Any
missing or unclear details were clarified through subsequent interviews and
conversations. Table 3.2 presents our coding scheme for identifying new business
model content, governance, and structure, including our definitions and
supportive illustrative quotes. Elaborating on our synthesis, Tables 3.3a-‐c present
the summary of each dental practice’s business model innovation based on the
coding scheme presented in Table 3.2.
After obtaining an in-‐depth understanding of business model innovation
taking place in our ten case studies, we did proceed to pair-‐wise cross-‐case
comparison, with the goal of detecting similar and divergent themes in all cases
(Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Glaser & Strauss, 1967). We compared several
constructs across cases and groups of cases (Miles & Huberman, 1994). We also
formed tentative relationships between constructs from the emerging coding
schemes, which were later refined via the replication logic, revisiting each case to
verify the occurrence of specific constructs in the interviews with the dentists and
other stakeholders. As the theory started to become clearer, we included
references to and informed the received literature, when available, to sharpen the
emerging insights from our findings. We finally engaged in an iterative process of
comparison across data, emerging theory, and the received literature until
theoretical saturation was reached (Eisenhardt, 1989; Glaser & Strauss, 1967).
Focusing on the ten most extreme cases enabled us to reach theoretical
saturation, and when re-‐analyzing data from the other 23 dental service providers
we had originally interviewed during the first round of the initially identified 33
cases, we were unable to come up with any new theoretical categories, while at
the same time finding more evidence consistent with our conclusions.
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3.5 Findings
The previous data analysis of the case studies allowed us to identify
overarching patterns affecting the business model innovation of the dental
providers in Germany. We identified four antecedents that differ in how they
affect the business models and lead to change. When comparing the patterns of
business model innovation in our cases, three main differentiating themes
emerged from the data: goal to value capture, specialization, and concentration.
In addition we define environmental constraints as a translation of the evolving
ecosystem as the fourth antecedent of business model innovation. Table 3.4
summarizes the four antecedents of business model innovation identified in our
in-‐depth case studies. In Table 3.4 we further provide the definitions of the
constructs and support the identified constructs with illustrative quotes from the
interviews. We discuss each identified antecedent in more detail below and
present further evidence supporting our findings.
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3.5.1 Goal to value capture
The ecosystem of dental practices in Germany is evolving, mainly driven by
significant changes and differences between the public and private health
insurance fees payment structures (BEMA and GOZ) and the innovation in
dentistry technology, materials, and treatment processes. Dental service providers
adapt to the evolution of the ecosystem by changing the mechanisms of value
appropriation in their business models. The goal to value capture is one of the
antecedents of business model innovation and we define it as the degree of value
appropriation, the mechanism that allows the dental practice to retain part of the
value it creates as profit and increase revenues. The degree of value appropriation
determines the activities of the dental practice’s business model and its resource
management, as well as its unique strategic resources and the way they are
organized.
Dental service providers do not have the incentive anymore to provide
standard treatment and get paid only by the public health insurance regulatory
body BEMA that regularly tries to reduce the fees and introduces caps and
limitations to treatments. As a consequence, they change their traditional business
models by offering services that are accounted for by the private GOZ regulatory,
which is much more lucrative for dental service providers as there are no caps, no
limitations to treatments, and higher fees factoring. However, GOZ provides very
strict and detailed descriptions of what accounts as a private service and how it is
supposed to be delivered, with what instruments, and in what time frame. The
quality required in order to be able to calculate with GOZ fees is very high and
requires a proved high level of expertise and time. Thus, dental service providers
are forced to specialize their services and activities. As a specialized dentist
explained (Practice 3):
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“You can only make real money when you go private. But you can only
achieve this by focusing on the private treatments, and for that you need time.
Without my partners I would not be able to do what I do. And it is not easy to
charge privately. And patients are more demanding too, even if their private
insurance covers it all. They want the best.”
The classic business model of a small, individual, personal dental practice is
not sustainable nowadays. The former business model used to focus on generic
practitioners. However, dentists usually cannot maintain this business model if
they want to increase their value capture potential and reach the private GOZ fees
because the treatments prescribed by GOZ are much more quality, time, and cost
intensive. Thus, with limited resources and activities, dentists cannot offer general
and specialized treatments equally. The activity choice is a matter of trade-‐off.
Accordingly, dental service providers further attract publicly insured patients and
try to reach their private pockets by offering more and better treatments factored
by the private GOZ. A large pool of publicly insured patients allows the dental
service provider to maintain a sustainable base of potential patients that might
receive privately accounted for treatments in the future. An employed dentist
(Practice 1) explained:
“We provide a new specialization of dental aesthetics, which allows us to
offer higher standard of treatment that is not covered by BEMA. It is a purely
private service. However, patients gain from the tooth preservation service. And
we cut external lab costs.”
Specifically, in their pursue of increased value capture through private fees
factoring by GOZ, dental service providers employ resource management by taking
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actions that structure and re-‐structure their activity portfolios, bundle activities to
build specialized capabilities, and leverage the specialized capabilities to exploit
market opportunities. By doing so, dental service providers can simultaneously
exploit and capture value as well as create value for customers. Driven by their
goal to value capture, dentists implement innovations in techniques, tools and
materials and pass them on to their patients, thereby increasing their value
creation. Patients benefit from higher quality service. In sum, the goal to value
capture increases value creation and triggers business model innovation of dental
practices that leads to new content, new structures and sometimes also new
governance.
3.5.2 Specialization
Specialization is another antecedent of business model innovation and
closely related to the goal to value capture. We define specialization as the extent
to which the firm’s employees are individually focused on particular technological
areas. Specialization of labor increases output by increasing productivity of labor.
This in turn leads to increasing returns to scale, which is reflected in the
decreasing costs of the dental practices in our case studies despite of their
investments in specialization. Dental providers specialize in areas of their interest,
gain more expertise in those particular fields, and consequently increase the value
creation potential of their business models through the effects of the experience
curve. At the same time, the increase in expertise allows the specialized dentists
to charge higher private fees specified GOZ. Our findings further support Adam
Smith’s (1776) theory that places specialization predominantly at the core of
economic aspirations and makes egoism the fundamental motive of all behavior.
As one dental provider (Practice 5) explained:
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“Now we finally do what we always wanted to do. I enjoy performing
surgeries only. I’m happy I don’t have to deal with other things. Drill and fill can be
boring. And it costs you time to do anything else. My partners feel the same. This is
why we founded our specialized practice. We don’t get headaches over others
things.”
Dental service providers innovate their business models by either hiring
dentists specialized in areas that may compliment their portfolio of offerings or
they collaborate with partners by specializing in particular areas and create new
portfolio of offerings. Most practices in our case studies are specialized in diverse
areas in addition to general dentistry, which is the main generator of patients for
future specialized treatments. Our findings imply that having a more specialized
dentistry workforce without the offering of general dentistry causes higher
spending for the dental practice and less efficient dental care for the patients. The
new, large, anonymous practices create and maintain a large base of own patients
by providing general dentistry treatments as the underlying activity of the
practice. The more own patients a practice has the larger is the potential for
future patients requiring specialized services. Practices with a large base of
patients and with the offering of general dentistry are not dependent on the
referrals of patients from other practices. They can decide how they treat patients
without any intervention or prescription by the referring dental providers, and
they increase their own sustainability. One founding partner of Practice 1
explained:
“I couldn’t survive without my own patients. Oral surgery and implantology
is all I do. No other dentist would refer patients to my practice out of fear that I
would keep them as we are a full-‐fledged practice covering the key areas with
myself as a specialist in oral surgery. I need our patients to safe our future. Every
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patient who comes for a check up constitutes a potential future patient for
privately accounted for services that we offer.”
Specialization is the response to the evolving ecosystem and the cuts in
fees by the public health insurances. This ecosystem development, in turn,
encourages patients to loose their loyalty and instead of visiting one particular
dentist of their confidence, patients explore different providers based on the best
treatment they can obtain. Specialization drives the most radical business model
innovation as all three design elements of the business model are changed. This
identified trend of specialization is further supported by the increase in the
number of recognized dental specializations, which are certified by specialization
boards and associations. Moreover, specialization acts as the basis for a new way
of collaboration among dentists. The complexity of institutional change in the
German dentistry care is such that dynamics of change at one level (increased
specialization among forms in the organizational field) run hand in hand with the
dynamics at another level (increased specialization within organizational forms).
We therefore reiterate the business model innovation of dental practices, implying
that the general trend toward greater specialization of organizational forms
involves an increase in large, anonymous, specialist versus small, personal, general
dental practices. The widely observed trend toward specialization involves the
creation and rapid proliferation of new types of specialized organizations,
competing with, but differing from general, classic dental practices.
3.5.3 Concentration
Concentration is another antecedent we identified in our research. During
the past ten years, activities of dental service providers have become more
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concentrated. This theme emerges among both individuals and organizations
alike. Individual dentists are less likely to operate as independent individual
practitioners in small, individual, personal practices instead they prefer and aim at
an organizational in form of independent larger group practices. However, on the
organization level, dental practices do not desire to operate as component units of
larger systems, like it is common with medical centers and hospitals, which often
operate as members of some type of a larger administrative system. A shift in the
relations among actors; that is, the concentration among individuals and
organizations is one antecedent of business model innovation defined by the
evidence of institutional change. One of the partners of Practice 8 explained:
“We are a center covering all areas. We are much more efficient and
profitable by putting all specializations under one roof. We decrease our costs and
we earn more. And of course, patients prefer large professional centers. Also, other
colleagues refer their patients to us.”
Concentration of activities leads to changes of the scale on which activities
are delivered. It refers to the horizontal integration of activities – the combining of
similar activities – and it drives the efficiency-‐based theme of business models. In
the large, anonymous dental practices, dentists work together regularly as a team
toward a common goal of maximizing the patient’s overall outcomes as efficiently
as possible. They are all experts in their respective fields, know and trust one
another, and coordinate easily to increase efficiency in terms of time and minimize
waste of resources. They discuss cases frequently and review data on their own
performance. They further innovate their business models by establishing new
protocols and develop more efficient ways to engage their patients.
Concentration facilitates communication, collaboration, and efficiency for
customers and leads to higher value innovation. It allows dental service providers
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to adapt better to the evolving ecosystem by increasing the range of services
being offered, change of opening hours and the introduction of shift work due to
concentration of practitioners in one dental practice. Further, concentration leads
to better cost sharing and therefore more cost efficiency, as well as knowledge
sharing. A shift in the concentration among individuals and organizations, that is,
relations among dentists and dental practices, is one of the ways in which
institutional change is evident in our research. Concentration is the response to
the cooperation dimension of the ecosystem. It leads to changes in all three
elements of the business model as it changes the content of the business model,
the way the activities are structured and the way they are governed and organized
by policies.
3.5.4 Environmental constraints
We define environmental constraints as the evolving ecosystem, that is, the
extent to which economic, legal, socio-‐political, regulatory, technological, and
cultural conditions, as well as industry norms and requirements impose on dental
service providers. The evolving ecosystem has an impact on the internal
constraints of dental practices in terms of available resources and capabilities to
innovate the business model. Predicated on the assumption that the focal firm
adapts to the evolving ecosystem, the implication is that the evolving ecosystem
itself is an antecedent of business model innovation. Elaborating on our findings,
dental practices adapt to health reforms imposed by the government and the
changing regulations by health insurances. Focusing more on the private health
insurance regulatory, while at the same time bypassing the cuts in fees by the
public health insurances, requires changes in the content delivery of dental
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practices, as well as changes in the business model structure and governance. It
also impacts the value appropriation mechanism of the traditional business model.
While increasing value appropriation, services paid by private health
insurances require different standards and performance measures than public
health insurances; this again has a negative impact on the cost drivers,
investments, and time of dental service providers. Not all dental practices,
however, have the capabilities and/or the resources to adapt to such
environmental changes and innovate their existing business models. For example,
a dental practice may respond to cuts in fees by the public health insurances by
specializing its services. Yet, in order to do so, it needs to employ one or more
specialized dentists and change the practice’s structure and governance. If the
practice premises, however, do not provide the necessary space for additional
practitioners, this constitutes an internal constraint to the intended business
model innovation. One partner of Practice 8 explained:
“You have to find work-‐around-‐mechanism. Private treatments pay more so
we provide only these services. We specialized in three areas crucial for us in order
to bypass any changes taking place in general dentistry. We don't have to deal
with other institutions anymore.”
Further, in Germany, the number of new dental practices has been
decreasing during the past ten years and instead the number of employed dentists
has been increasing. This development indicates the progress of larger dental
practices with more dentists employed, which, in turn, implies higher levels of
specialization and concentration of dental practices. Moreover, technological
developments in the ecosystem lead to higher investments in technology of dental
practices, such as digitalization and the technological progress in tools, materials,
and techniques. Practices that do not invest in new technology are not able to
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provide services of the highest standard and therefore loose out on collaboration
options with other partners and higher private fee payments, and in the worst
case they loose out on reputation and loose patients to other dental practices.
Cultural and societal changes further enable the change from small, individual,
personal dental practices into large, anonymous dental practices as patients are
no longer loyal to just one dental service provider of their confidence but instead
they opt for different dental practices where they obtain the best treatment
possible. One of the partners at Practice 7 explained:
“Patients become more and more demanding. They know that they are not
dependent on one dentist anymore. They go where they can get the best
treatment. It’s not like it used to be. You have to offer the best service.”
The distinction between external and internal environmental constraints is
necessary and useful at the same time. On the one hand, our findings show how
external ecosystem factors constrain and influence dental practices and individual
dental service providers. On the other hand, dental practices are not the passive
pawns of external constraints, allowing environmental constraints to freely change
them, but instead dental service providers take steps to challenge these
constraints, thereby innovating their business models.
3.6 Discussion
Based on our findings described above, in the following we advance a
framework that has been synthetized from our research. Figure 3.1 presents the
framework developed as an outcome from our grounded theory research
undertaken and the resulting findings. This model connects the four identified
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innovation antecedents of goal to value capture, specialization, concentration, and
environmental constraints to business model innovation and to its outcome, which
is reflected as value innovation of service providers. The discussion further
indicates how firms adapt their business models to an evolving ecosystem by
pursuing business model innovation.
Figure 3.1: Model of business model innovation
Source: Own creation: Model of antecedents and outcomes of business model innovation based on findings.
Business model innovation, in terms of novelty generation, contributes to
the re-‐shaping of the firm’s activities necessary to realize and address the
envisioned external disruption of the ecosystem. Sanchez and Ricart (2010) note
that environmental constraints not only hinder but also help novelty-‐centered
business model design. When focused externally, business model innovation can
be channeled towards envisaging changes in an industry’s architecture (Jacobides,
Knudsen & Augier, 2006) and the ecosystem (Teece, 2009). Industry architecture
denotes the evolving relationships among value chain participants and other
stakeholders and determines how labor and surplus are divided among the types
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of players involved (Jacobides et al., 2006). This architecture facilitates those
interactions that allow firms to identify opportunities for and constraints to radical
business model innovation. Knowledge of this architecture is essential to
identifying who does what and to what norms. The business ecosystem usually
incorporates architecture across multiple industries. Attending to industry
architecture and the business ecosystem (Moore, 1993; Teece, 2007) expands the
firm’s playing field beyond the boundaries of its industry value chain. By
interacting with various existing players in its ecosystem (e.g., customers,
partners, suppliers and other stakeholders) and proactively seeking new players
(e.g., boundary disruptors) (Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005), a firm can transform an
ecosystem in addition to its adaptation to the evolving ecosystem.
Ecosystems continuously evolve and never stand still (Kim & Mauborgne,
2005). Interdependencies and configuration of activities are central to the concept
of a business model and go beyond coordination and cooperation (Stieglitz &
Heine, 2007). They enable the evolution of a focal firm’s activity system over time
as its ecosystem changes (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a,b, 2011). When the ecosystem
evolves, firms adjust their activity systems and reconfigure the sets of activities
within the business model (Siggelkow & Levinthal, 2003). Internal fit among
activities ensures that the business model has a coherent organizing of activities,
while external fit refers to the appropriateness of the configuration of activities
given the ecosystem affecting the business model. Fit among the activities in the
business model is of crucial importance to the firm since environmental changes in
the ecosystem can affect the external and/or the internal fit (Siggelkow, 2001,
2002a,b, 2011), which in turn will affect the business model architecture and the
resources employed. The re-‐organization of activities is particularly relevant
because “changing the scope of the organization not only affects the extent to
which it can capture the fruits of its innovative labor; but also the extent to which
it can be innovative in the future” (Jacobides et al., 2006, p: 1201). Adding,
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changing or eliminating activities is about scope choices and reveals an
entrepreneur’s theory of how to make money (Svejenova et al., 2011). Most of the
received literature on business models, however, places the emphasis on the
value creation and value delivery dimensions of the business model concept and
less on the value capture aspect (Desyllas & Sako, 2012). Value capture is,
however, the focus of business model innovation (Amit & Zott, 2012).
According to institutional theory (DiMaggio & Powell, 1991; Hargadon &
Douglas, 2001; Hargadon & Sutton, 1997; Scott, 2008), environmental constraints
affect the extent and sustainability of business model innovation. Driven by the
antecedents of goal to value capture, specialization and concentration, they
influence how activities are re-‐organized and orchestrated within the activity
system and thus how the content, structure and governance of the new business
model are changed and re-‐designed. Specialization is associated with the division
of labor and allows employees to specialize in certain niches, thereby leading up to
productivity and innovation and further to growth of the firm (Smith, 1776). It
affects how service providers search for new technologies and what type of
knowledge they acquire (Eisenhardt & Tabrizi, 1995; Katila & Ahuja, 2002).
Concentration of activities is essential if integrated service providers are to form
and value innovation is the desired outcome. It is among the most difficult steps
for many firms, because it can threaten both prestige and service providers’ turf.
Yet the benefits of concentration can be game-‐changing (Porter & Lee, 2013).
Concentration depends on densities of production in the areas specializing in the
production of different products and services (Aiginger & Rossi-‐Hansberg, 2006).
At this stage it is important to emphasize the endogenous role of the
business model concept. The endogeneity idiosyncrasy of the business model
implies that antecedents of business model innovation can be the drivers of
innovation at one point in time, but they can develop into parts of the business
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model as the business model is about making choices. For example, while
specialization and concentration are identified as the antecedents of the business
model, with the time they turn and develop into crucial elements of the business
model. By adapting to evolving ecosystems, service providers create novel
business models. These findings support recent work on institutional theory that
highlights institutional entrepreneurship and describes how institutional
entrepreneurs construct new markets, become dominant players in those
markets, and simultaneously legitimize business model innovation by attracting
new stakeholders of the ecosystem (Battilana, Leca, & Boxenbaum, 2009; Hwang
& Powell, 2005; Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005). Evolving ecosystems act as stimuli
and creative challenges that enable firms to deal with them by creating novelty
rather than imitating and following existing business models (Amit & Zott, 2015).
Thus, we argue that business model innovation enables firms to
continuously enact upon opportunities of value creation and appropriation during
the evolution of the ecosystem. We further claim that an interplay takes place
between the evolution of the ecosystem and business model innovation of firms
within the ecosystem. The novelty of a new business model opens up new
strategic directions and transforms the ecosystem. Thus, firms become adept at
experimenting with a repertoire of strategic alternatives that my spur game
changing strategies (Huber, 1991; Miller & Chen, 1996) toward other stakeholders
in the ecosystem and may transform the ecosystem itself. Such business model
innovation that orientates itself on the evolution of the ecosystem refers to a focal
firm’s way to improve the odds and out-‐smart other players in pursuit of profit
and growth (Lafley & Charan, 2008).
At the core of the business model innovation of the dental practices in our
case studies lies the objective of maximizing value for patients, that is, achieving
the best patient outcomes at the lowest cost. These dental practices undertake
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large-‐scale changes involving multiple components, driven by the identified
antecedents of business model innovation, which result in remarkable
improvements in outcomes and efficiency, and growth in market share. Dental
service providers in our case studies create stronger positions, increase their
bargaining power, and improve their standing and reputation by dramatically
improving the efficiency and effectiveness of providing their services. They grow
their market share by improving the outcomes of their dental service consumers.
Focus on goal to value capture, specialization, concentration and environmental
constraints allows service providers to become most competitive by innovating
and increasing the value they provide. Business model innovation leading to value
innovation requires a different competitive mind-‐set and a systematic way of
looking for opportunities (Kim & Mauborgne, 1997).
In line with value innovation theory, service providers in our research do not
use competition as their benchmark, but instead they follow the logic of value
innovation, which is about moving beyond the existing market boundaries by
creating a leap in value for customers and for the focal service providers who
leave the competition behind instead of matching and beating their competitors in
the existing market space (Hamel, 1998; Kim & Mauborgne, 2005). The dental
service providers focus on the willingness of patients to invest in their teeth. This
focus allows them to see what is most important to customers. Further, they do
not look at business opportunities through the lenses of their existing assets and
capabilities and do not allow their business model innovation to be constrained by
where they are at a given moment. The identified business model innovation
antecedents enable the dental service providers to replace the fragmented system
of small, individual practices with a system in which dental services are
concentrated in large, anonymous dental practices, thereby allowing the dental
service providers to offer their customers services they highly value while reducing
their own costs – this is the logic behind the business model innovation, which
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leads to value innovation (Hamel, 1998; Kim & Mauborgne, 1997). Service
providers that increase value will be most competitive (Porter & Lee, 2013). By
innovating their business models, dental service providers move away from a
supply-‐driven dental care system toward a patient-‐centered system around what
customers need, with a focus on patient outcome. Dental consumers expect the
service to be delivered in a qualitative, honest, and compassionate environment.
When patients make the decision to accept the dental treatment they actually
make the decision to accept the dentist. Although patients go to dentists for
health reasons, the choice of a dentist is related to value (Griffith & Abratt, 2013).
Simply co-‐locating dentists in the same premise, or simply putting up a sign
indicating a large, anonymous dental practice, will have little impact. Dental
service providers that progress rapidly in business model innovation with the goal
of value innovation reap vast benefits, even if regulatory change is slow. As the
patients’ outcomes improve, so do their reputations and, therefore, their patient
volumes. With the tools to manage and reduce costs, dental providers are able to
maintain economic viability even as fee payments stagnate and eventually decline.
Dental practices that concentrate volume of patients drive a virtuous cycle, in
which specialized dental providers improve value more rapidly – attracting still
more patients (Porter & Lee, 2013; Porter & Teisberg, 2006). Only dental service
providers can put in place business model innovation that is needed to improve
value, because value is ultimately determined by how dentistry is practiced. This
business model innovation involves the creation of a new game by envisioning and
realizing a new playing field and related system of roles, rules, relationships, and
outcomes. This, however, requires mobilization of collective action across a range
of stakeholders, within and outside the ecosystem, as well as lobbying efforts at
the institutional level to legitimize the new game (Aldrich & Fiol, 1994; Porter &
Lee, 2013; Porter & Teisberg, 2006). It also demands careful sequencing and
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timing of orchestration and negotiation activities so that new industry architecture
and ecosystem can come into being (Jacobides et al., 2006; Teece, 2007).
Our research contributes to the new research at the intersection of business
models and ecosystem as a response to the call by Zott and Amit (2013) and
answers the important questions about how firms adapt their business models to
an evolving ecosystem and what are the antecedents of business model
innovation in this context. We hereby contribute to the literature on business
models and strategy in several novel ways. First, we shed light on business model
innovation antecedents and trajectories by mapping the specific role of business
models, as well as their pivotal role in its integration and embeddedness within
the focal firm and the ecosystem in the context of complex service industry
setting. We empirically examine the antecedents of business model innovation, a
new form of innovation that is receiving increasing attention in strategy literature.
Our identification of antecedents of business model innovation and our
delineation of their mechanisms for sparking business model innovation as a way
to adapt to evolving ecosystems suggest a shift in perspective in research as we
extend the locus of innovation antecedents from individual insights in innovation
research (Beckman, 2006; Hargadon & Sutton, 1997; Ruef, 2002; Sinhur & Zott,
2014) to the consideration of firm-‐level antecedents of business model innovation.
Second, we provide a more systemic perspective that emphasizes the
interdependencies and complementarities between a firm and its stakeholders
within the ecosystem in order to better understand how value is created and
captured. In our focus on business model innovation, we emphasize firms’
orchestration of internal and external activities to enact opportunities of value
creation and appropriation, whether they are discovered or created, in order to
adapt to the evolving ecosystem. Third, we enhance strategy literature that points
to the relevance of value innovation as a competitive trajectory of business model
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innovation. We hereby emphasize the important role of business model
innovation in value appropriation and the need for specialization and
concentration of service providers. Fourth, we also contribute to institutional
theory by presenting the identified antecedents of business model innovation as
mechanism leading to institutional change in the ecosystem of service providers.
On a managerial side, our research presents a rare to find unconsolidated market
opportunity with the ability to buy highly profitable units and extract synergies.
3.7 Limitations and Directions for Future Research
Our current focus on antecedents of business model innovation emphasizes
the importance of ecosystems and how service providers adapt to the evolving
ecosystem and transform it through business model innovation. Thus, we enrich
the discussion on industry and ecosystem emergence and evolution by
highlighting the focal firm’s role in initiating institutional change through business
model innovation. This role should be further empirically tested and documented
in future research. Our conclusions are based on a sample of initial 147 case
studies, out of which we identified 10 in-‐depth and 23 supportive case studies in a
specific industry in one geographic region. The purpose of grounded theory
building is to generate and inspire new ideas (Glaser & Strauss, 1967).
Consequently, more empirical work is needed to validate and examine whether
our findings hold across a larger number of firms and a wider range of industries
and geographies. Future research should also focus on the process of business
model innovation and its impact on performance outcomes and differentiation
considering the significant performance consequences of business model
innovation (Markides, 2006; Pohle & Chapman, 2006; Zott & Amit, 2007) and its
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acknowledgement in research as key source of competitive advantage (Casadesus-‐
Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002; Teece, 2010).
Future research could also explore which parts of the adaptation process of
business model innovation to an evolving ecosystem are planned, and which parts
are emergent, and how can the best fit between the new business model and the
ecosystem be achieved. Further, taking the identified antecedents of business
model innovation, future research could explore the best timing for business
model adaptation predicated on the assumption that further changes the
ecosystem will occur. Following evolutionary theory, future research could analyze
the differentiation between intentional change and unintentional change of
business models in an evolving ecosystem. We approach the current research
setting from the business model innovation and strategy perspective, however,
future research could explore the research setting from the institutional theory
perspective exploring if the individual, small, personal dental practices are no
longer accepted in the ecosystem. Future research could also analyze the network
effects in the research setting and how the new emerging business models of
large, anonymous dental practices compete with the traditional, small, personal
ones. Last but not least, future research could approach business model
innovation of dental service providers from the customer perspective.
3.8 Conclusion
In this article, we build grounded theory on the antecedents of business
model innovation as a means of goal to value capture, specialization,
concentration and environmental constraints for value innovation of service
providers in their adaptation to the evolving ecosystem. Progress in business
116 | Page
model innovation is greatest if the multiple antecedents advance together as they
are interdependent and mutually reinforcing. We emphasize the importance of
value innovation as an outcome of business model innovation and a response to
an evolving ecosystem. We further highlight the particular challenge of business
model innovation in a service industry setting characterized by relatively low rate
of technological innovation, high extent of complexity and regulations, low levels
of competition and high economic recession protection. With this work at hand we
respond to recent calls in literature for new research at the intersection of
business models and ecosystems.
117 | Page
Chapter 4: Leverage or Develop? How Emerging
Market Multinationals Manage their
Business Models during their
Internationalization.
The phenomenal surge in internationalization by firms from emerging
markets has gained momentum in academic research. We contribute to the
growing stream of research by exploring the questions of how EMNEs manage and
innovate their business models as they internationalize. Following a critical review
of extant literature, we identify a conceptual framework depicted by two key
118 | Page
variables: (1) the level of institutional difference in terms of entry into emerging or
developed markets, and (2) strategic initiatives in terms of leveraging the
traditional business models or developing new business model. The framework
reveals four different business model management strategies EMNEs can pursue
during their internationalization trajectories. Second, we summarize from the
literature and the identified conceptual framework general propositions on the
internationalization of EMNEs. Third, we review distinctive case study examples to
illustrate the framework of different business model management strategies of
EMNEs as their internationalization trajectories evolve. The paper concludes with
theoretical and managerial implication and fruitful avenues for future research.
4.1 Introduction
Recent years have witnessed to a large degree the success story of emerging
markets multinationals (EMNEs). Companies such as América Móvil, the Mexican
telecoms giant, Samsung, the South Korean electronics group, or Embraer, the
Brazilian airplane manufacturer have become world-‐beaters – challenging their
western rivals in the way they have developed technology and pursued
innovation, transformed, innovated and managed their businesses models, and
internationalized not only to other emerging and least-‐developed economies but
more so to developed markets where they compete with Western firms on their
home turf. The ascendancy of these emerging multinationals and their
internationalization have gained increased academic attention in recent years
(Aulakh, 2007; Aulakh & Kotabe, 2008; Aulakh, Kotabe, & Teegen, 2000; Bonaglia,
Goldstein, & Mathews, 2007; Chittoor, Sarkar, Ray, & Aulakh, 2009; Cuervo-‐
Cazurra, 2007, 2008a; Del Sol & Kogan, 2007; Eden, 2010; Gammeltoft, Barnard, &
119 | Page
Madhok, 2010; Gubbi, Aulakh, Ray, Sarkar, & Chittoor, 2010; Hill & Mudambi,
2010; Khanna & Palepu, 2006; Lecraw, 1993; Luo & Tung, 2007; Mudambi, 2008;
Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a; Sauvant, 2008; Young, Hunag, & McDermott, 1996). As
Figure 4.1 suggests, interest in emerging multinationals has gained considerable
attention in academic literature since 1980. Particularly, we witness a significant
acceleration in research from 2007 till today. The recent increase in articles on
emerging markets multinationals demonstrates their increasing relevance in
management literature. Table 4.1 illustrates the development of research on
EMNEs in literature from 1980 till 2011. This phenomenon of EMNEs’
internationalization is worthy of scientific scrutiny since it is occurring in a world
that is very different from the past decades.
Figure 4.1: Development of research on emerging multinationals
Source: Own creation. Own illustration based on EBSCO Business Source Complete database as a starting point (Certo et al.,
2009; Laplume et al., 2008) and extended search to also include the ABI/INFORM Global on ProQuest and the Science
Collection databases. Period: January 1980 until May 2011.
First of all, EMNEs have to overcome their globalization ‘late mover’
disadvantage (Bartlett & Ghoshal, 2000; Madhok, 2010), and they have to
120 | Page
compete with established multinationals from the developed markets that have
better access to strategic resources such as financial capital, advanced
technologies and managerial, internationalization and competitive capabilities
(Guillen, 2000). Further, EMNEs typically originate from unique institutional and
resource environments (Hoskisson et al., 2000; Khanna & Palepu, 1997, 2006)
characterized by market failure through information asymmetry, misguided
regulations, inefficient judicial systems and weak legal frameworks, as well as
strong institutional voids, which, in turn, increase transaction costs of accessing
resources in the external markets and doing business in general (Chittoor et al.,
2009; Ghemawat & Khanna, 1998; Khanna & Palepu, 1997; Madhok, 2010).
Nonetheless, EMNEs succeed in overcoming their home market challenges. They
respond well to exogenous shocks of regulatory and institutional reforms (Cuervo-‐
Cazurra & Dau, 2009), pressures of new competition, opportunities offered by
globalization, and transform themselves to become a sizeable and rising feature of
the world economy (Chittoor et al., 2009; Duysters et al. 2009; Madhok, 2010) by
creating innovative business models (Hill & Mudambi, 2010; Mudambi, 2008).
Research on agile EMNEs that combine novel business models with
technological innovation has enriched our understanding of the value creating
potential of EMNEs’ business model innovation (Govindarajan & Ramamurti, 2011;
Immelt, Govindarajan, & Trimble, 2009; Sarkar, 2011). However, although many
EMNEs are rapidly going global, both to better compete in international markets
as well as to be more competitive at home, relatively little is known about the
internationalization trajectories of these firms (Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc 2008;
Peng, Wang, & Jiang, 2008). While some scholars argue that EMNEs follow an
exploration strategy with the aim to acquire new advantages in order to overcome
their home advantage deficit (Luo & Tung, 2007; Mathews, 2002) and their liability
of emergingness (Madhok, 2010), others claim that EMNEs pursue exploitation
strategies in order to leverage their existing firm and country specific advantages
121 | Page
(Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008; Narula, 2006; Ramamurti, 2009a). This distinction
has produced important insights but is still incomplete in literature.
Although the literature on emerging markets multinationals allows us to
identify a set of internationalization trajectories of these firms, this paucity of
research renders our understanding incomplete as it does not tell us precisely how
they are linked to business model management that is relevant because business
models as the “reflection of the firm’s realized strategy” (Casadesus-‐Masanell &
Ricart, 2010: 195) offer a particularly interesting insight in the context of EMNEs’
internationalization. Against this background, the business model as a new unit of
analysis is necessary as it allows for coevally considering EMNEs internal and
external aspects. The business model allows analyzing how these firms from
emerging markets manage their business models during their internationalization
trajectories and how they thereby create and appropriate value. Additionally, the
business model encompasses a system-‐level perspective (Amit & Zott, 2012, 2014;
Zott & Amit, 2013) that includes firm-‐centric activities spanning the firm
boundaries of the firm (Zott, Amit, & Massa, 2011). Thus, by focusing on the
business model as unit of analysis it is possible to include interactions between the
focal EMNEs and their business ecosystems that are crucial in the context of
internationalization of firms from emerging markets in our research. This makes
further research for greater clarity and theory development necessary.
Consequently, as the concept of EMNEs has matured and addressed a wide
range of related areas, we argue that the next step in closing this literature gap
and advancing the theoretical milestones on EMNEs is in understanding how
exactly they manage and innovate their business models during their global
expansion to advanced and emerging economies.
122 | Page
Against this background we raise the following research questions: (1) How
do EMNEs manage their business models as they internationalize? (2) How do
EMNEs innovate their business models when they internationalize?
This paper attempts to address these research questions by proposing a
conceptual framework derived from extant research, illustrated by eight case
studies of diverse emerging markets firms. Our research extends current literature
on EMNEs. We suggest that these firms’ international expansions impose a need
to either leverage the existent business model from home or develop a new
business model and manage dual business models depending on the institutional
context of the host country. We highlight the difficulties associated with the
required business model innovation and the subsequent management of dual
business models and suggest that these difficulties are likely to be affected by
their destination of internationalization. Furthermore, we contribute to the
literature on emerging multinationals and business model literature through
highlighting of a useful setting and framework to investigate the interplay
between different internationalization trajectories and business model
management strategies. Specifically, we add new insights to the theories of
internationalization strategies of emerging economy firms (Cuervo-‐Cazurra, 2007;
Dawar & Frost, 1999; Khanna & Palepu, 2006; Luo & Tung, 2007; Madhok 2010;
Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a), and we add to the business model literature in the
context of internationalization of emerging economy firms.
The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. In the next section we
establish the context by integrating insights from the relevant literature on
EMNEs’ internationalization and on the notion on business models. We then
propose a conceptual framework and make propositions summarized from
literature of how EMNEs manage their business models during internationalization
123 | Page
into emerging and developed markets. We explore the validity of our framework
with illustrations of eight case studies of EMNEs. We conclude by drawing
implications to theory and practice and offering directions for further research.
4.2 Theoretical Background
4.2.1 Emerging market multinationals and their internationalization
strategies
Emerging economies constitute unique institutional and resource
environments (Hoskisson et al., 2000), characterized by institutional voids such as
underdeveloped institutions and market intermediaries, and limited resources
(Khanna & Palepu, 2006). Consequently, firms from emerging economies are
limited in their growth by under-‐developed markets, low resource munificence,
unsophisticated customers, sub-‐optimal suppliers, weak infrastructure, and
market failure caused by information asymmetry, communication and information
challenges, misguided regulations, inefficient judicial systems and weak legal
frameworks (Chittoor et al., 2009; Khanna & Palepu 1997; Madhok, 2010;
Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a). They also suffer of lower technological and
managerial standards, underdeveloped capabilities and inadequate resources, as
well as lack of experience in global competition (Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Dau, 2009;
Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a). This liability of emergingness (Madhok, 2010) is
internally further increased by the EMNEs’ small asset bases and the limited access
to new strategic assets, which makes it difficult for them to scale advantages along
the value chain activities vis-‐à-‐vis multinationals from developed markets. These
disadvantages decrease efficiency and increase the transaction costs of EMNEs of
124 | Page
accessing strategic resources and conducting business in general (Cuervo-‐Cazurra
& Genc, 2008; Madhok, 2010).
Table 4.1: Research on emerging multinationals in literature
Source: Own creation. Own illustration based on EBSCO Business Source Complete database as a starting point (Certo et al.,
2009; Laplume et al., 2008) and extended search to also include the ABI/INFORM Global on ProQuest and the Science
Collection databases. Period: January 1980 until May 2011.
Table 4.1 above and Table 4.2 below summarize central works using the
terminology of emerging market multinationals in their studies. In past research,
scholars have focused mainly on the context of emerging multinationals,
internationalization, entry mode decisions, mode of entry, competitive advantage,
inter-‐organizational relationships, and innovation models and entrepreneurship.
Despite the impressive growth of this literature over the last ten years, further
research is needed.
JournalsNumber of studies Studies
Academy of Management Journal 3 Guillen, 2000; Hitt et al., 2000; Khanna & Palepu, 2000
Academy of Management Perspectives 3 Guillén & García-Cana, 2009; Luo & Rui, 2009; Luo et al., 2011
Journal of International Business Studies 24 Ghymn, 1980; Lecraw, 1993; Lee & Beamish, 1995; Erramilli et al., 1997; Makino et al, 2002; Guillen, 2003; Doh et al., 2004; Ramamurti, 2004; Zheng et al., 2006; Buckley et al., 2007; Cuervo-Cazurra et al., 2007; Del Sol & Kogan, 2007; Elango & Pattnaik, 2007; Filatotchev et al., 2007; Luo & Tung, 2007; Yiu et al., 2007; Zhou et al., 2007; Cuervo-Cazurra & Genc, 2008; Aybar & Ficici, 2009; Bhaumik et al., 2010; Gao et al, 2010; Gubbi et al. 2010; Kim et al., 2010; Lu et al., 2010
Journal of International Management 27 Luo & Tan, 1998; Harvey et al., 1999; Ramamurti, 2003; Aulakh, 2007; Chittoor & Ray, 2007; Cuervo-Cazurra, 2007; Garg & Delios, 2007; Klein & Wöcke, 2007; Li, 2007; Pananond, 2007; Petrou, 2007; Aulakh & Kotabe, 2008; Chittoor et al., 2008; Cuervo-Cazurra, 2008; Perez-Batres & Eden, 2008; Li & Kozhikode, 2009; Barnard, 2010; Gammeltoft et al., 2010; Hill & Mudambi, 2010; Kalotay & Sulstarova, 2010; Knoerich, 2010; Li & Yao, 2010; Li, 2010; Tan & Meyer, 2010; Tolentiono, 2010; Zhao et al. 2010; Boehe, 2011Management International Review 6 Monkiewicz, 1986; Young et al., 1996; Thomas et al., 2007; Ang & Michailova, 2008; Miller et al., 2008; Tracey & Phillips, 2011
Management Science 1 Mahmood & Mitchell, 2004
Organization Science 1 Chittoor et al. 2009
Strategic Management Journal 2 Khanna & Rivkin, 2001; Chacar & Vissa, 2005
125 | Page
Table 4.2: Categories in research of emerging multinationals
Source: Own creation. Own illustration based on EBSCO Business Source Complete database as a starting point (Certo et al.,
2009; Laplume et al., 2008) and extended search to also include the ABI/INFORM Global on ProQuest and the Science
Collection databases. Period: January 1980 until May 2011.
Questions about the development of competitive advantages by EMNEs and
where those advantages derive from, EMNEs’ significant outward FDI in
developing economies, and how some EMNEs successfully compete with MNEs
from industrialized economies, as well as their models of innovation require more
research and theory development. Consequently, as represented with solid arrows
in Figure 4.2 below, some non-‐inclusive areas are linked to others by more
research that has been conducted, other areas have received considerably less
attention in research as indicated with dashed arrows. Figures 4.3a – 4.3e
summarize extant research on EMNEs categorized in the occurring research
themes.
126 | Page
Figure 4.2: Current themes in research on emerging multinationals
Source: Own creation.
A stream of literature focused on empirically testing the applicability of the
popular typologies of competitive strategies at generic level (Miles & Snow, 1978;
Mintzberg, 1978; Porter, 1980) in the context of EMNEs (Aulakh et al., 2000; Kim &
Lim, 1988). Kim and Lim (1988) tested for the existence of Porter's (1980) generic
strategies in the electronics industry in South Korea and found evidence for mixed
strategies rather than pure types. Aulakh et al. (2000) found that cost leadership
strategy was more successful in the case of exports to developed markets while
differentiation worked better in developing economies. Taking into account the
unique environmental and institutional context of emerging markets, there have
been attempts in literature to develop specific conceptual models that propose a
127 | Page
set of generic strategies available to EMNEs as they respond to institutional
changes (Bonaglia et al., 2007; Craig & Douglas, 1997; Cuervo-‐Cazurra, 2007;
Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008; Dawar & Frost, 1999; Khanna & Palepu, 2006).
Craig and Douglas (1997) and Bonaglia et al. (2007) propose that the
internationalization responses of EMNEs range from cost-‐oriented commodity
approaches based on low-‐cost labor component and private-‐label manufacturing
to higher value-‐creating approaches that capture a greater share of the value
chain. Dawar and Frost (1999) identify a mix of defensive and assertive strategic
options leveraging on some of the unique advantages and resources possessed by
EMNEs. Khanna and Palepu (2006) and Cuervo-‐Cazurra and Genc (2008) suggest
that EMNEs should exploit their advantage of managing institutional voids that
characterize their local markets to counter multinationals from developed
markets. Cuervo-‐Cazurra (2007) argues that EMNEs that benefit from a location
advantage in their home market are more likely to start internationalization by
using marketing subsidiaries, however, EMNEs that benefit from a location
advantage in the host country or face difficulties in the transfer of products across
countries are more likely to start internationalization by establishing production
subsidiaries.
The common thesis underlying this past research as summarized in Figures
4.3a – 4.3e is that EMNEs experience difficulties in developing resources and
capabilities to compete with multinationals from developed markets and hence
successful internationalization is only possible by means of exploitation of their
country and firm specific ownership advantages, such as low costs or experience in
operating within institutional voids, in other, similar, emerging or less developed
economies. This stream of literature follows the argument that EMNEs, as well as
experiencing disadvantages, also experience certain advantages (Dawar & Frost,
1999).
128 | Page
Figure 4.3a: Research on EMNEs: Context of emerging multinationals
Topi
c Are
aSu
b-To
pic
Stud
y's F
ocus
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arke
ts (g
ener
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-----
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mel
toft,
P.,
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ard,
H.,
&
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hok,
A. (
2010
, JIM
)
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arac
teris
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NEs
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ener
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kiew
icz,
J. (1
986,
MIR
)
Typo
logi
es o
f EM
NEs
and
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EsA
siaCh
ina
Li, P
.P. (
2007
, JIM
)
Inte
rnat
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aCh
ittoo
r, R.
, Ray
, S.,
Aul
akh,
P.S
., &
Sa
rkar
, M.B
. (20
08, J
IM)
Theo
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ches
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verc
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chan
ges i
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ergi
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arke
tsEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
-----
Aul
akh,
P.S
. & K
otab
e, M
. (20
08, J
IM)
Polit
ical
, Reg
ulat
ory
and
Insti
tutio
nal E
nviro
nmen
tSt
ruct
ural
refo
rms a
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e of m
ultin
atio
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crea
se co
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titiv
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sLa
tin A
mre
ica
-----
Cuer
vo-C
azur
ra, A
. (2
008,
JIM
)
Liab
ility
of l
ocal
ness
: cha
ngin
g fro
m ‘t
hen’
(pre
-exo
geno
us
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ock)
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shoc
k)Em
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arke
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-----
Pere
z-Ba
tres,
L.A
., &
Ede
n, L
. (20
08, J
IM)
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espi
te p
rivat
izat
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and
dere
gula
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Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)---
--Ra
mam
urti,
R. (
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, JIM
)
Regi
onal
com
petit
ive a
dvan
tage
bas
ed o
n pi
onee
ring
econ
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re
form
sLa
tin A
mre
ica
Chile
Del
Sol
, P. &
Kog
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. (20
07, J
IBS)
Effe
cts o
f mar
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affil
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d an
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depe
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Kor
eaK
im, H
.; K
im, H
. & H
oski
sson
, R.E
. (2
010,
JIBS
)
Envi
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Pre-
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pos
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is in
tern
atio
naliz
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pans
ion
Asia
Thai
land
Pana
nond
, P. (
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, JIM
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Am
bide
xter
ityCo
-evo
lutio
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-com
pete
nce,
co-o
petit
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rient
atio
nEm
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arke
ts (g
ener
al)
-----
Luo,
Y. &
Rui
, H. (
2009
, AM
P)
Con
text
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Emer
ging
M
ultin
atio
nals
129 | Page
Figure 4.3b: Research on EMNEs: Internationalization
Topi
c A
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Sub-
Topi
cSt
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s Foc
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arke
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arke
ts (g
ener
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----
-H
arve
y, M
.G.,
Spei
er, C
., &
Nov
icev
ic,
M.M
. (19
99, J
IM)
Ant
eced
ents
Inte
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iona
l wor
k ex
perie
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favo
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tern
atio
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in
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does
not
Asi
aTa
iwan
Tan,
D.;
Mey
er, K
.E. (
2010
, JIM
)
Stra
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atio
nal f
irms i
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Tan
, J.J.
(199
8, JI
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sia
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, K.;
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.; Li
, J.J.
(200
6,
JIB
S)
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otiv
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diff
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ions
than
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Es fr
om U
SEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts, N
orth
A
mer
ica
USA
Ghy
mn,
K. (
1980
, JIB
S)
Expl
oita
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of o
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vant
ages
, but
als
o ac
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adva
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Indo
nesi
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craw
, D.J.
(199
3, JI
BS)
Mot
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EMN
Es fo
llow
clie
nts f
rom
hom
e, w
hile
MN
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orei
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arke
t opp
ortu
nitie
sEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-Pe
trou,
A. (
2007
, JIM
)
Gai
n su
bsta
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lly fr
om th
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obal
am
bitio
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f EM
NEs
(acq
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' ow
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Eu
rope
, Asi
aG
erm
any,
C
hina
Kno
eric
h, J.
(201
0, JI
M)
In e
mer
ging
mar
kets
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pstre
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atur
al re
sour
ces,
whi
le in
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ontro
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nstre
am m
arke
tsEa
ster
n Eu
rope
Rus
sia
Kal
otay
, K. &
Sul
star
ova,
A. (
2010
, JIM
)
Cha
lleng
esLo
ss o
f adv
anta
ge p
rovi
ded
by re
sour
ces t
rans
ferr
ed a
broa
d, c
reat
ion
of a
dis
adva
ntag
e by
reso
urce
s tra
nsfe
rred
abr
oad,
lack
of
com
plem
enta
ry re
sour
ces r
equi
red
to o
pera
te a
broa
dA
dvan
ced
and
emer
ging
m
arke
ts--
---
Cue
rvo-
Caz
urra
, A.,
Mal
oney
, M.M
., &
M
anra
khan
, S. (
2007
, JIB
S)
Proc
esse
sIn
tern
atio
naliz
atio
n pr
oces
ses (
inw
ard
and
outw
ard)
as m
echa
nism
s of
faci
litat
ing
com
petit
ive
catc
h-up
Asi
aC
hina
You
ng, S
., C
hun-
Hua
Hua
ng, K
., &
M
cDer
mot
t, M
. (1
996,
MIR
)
EMN
Es fo
llow
diff
eren
t pat
tern
s of i
nter
natio
nal e
xpan
sion
than
the
tradi
tiona
l Am
eric
an m
odel
of t
he m
ultin
atio
nal e
nter
pris
eEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-G
uillé
n, M
.F. &
Gar
cía-
Can
al, E
. (20
09,
AM
P)
Rel
atio
nshi
p be
twee
n st
abili
ty, v
entu
re c
reat
ion
ratio
nale
, sat
isfa
ctio
n le
vel,
and
cont
rol w
ith p
erfo
rman
ce re
spec
tivel
yA
sia
Sout
h K
orea
Lee,
C. &
Bea
mis
h, P
.W. (
1995
, JIB
S)
Hig
her s
hare
hold
er v
alue
whe
n th
e ta
rget
firm
s are
loca
ted
in
adva
nced
eco
nom
ic a
nd in
stitu
tiona
l env
ironm
ents
Sout
h Ea
st A
sia
Indi
aG
ubbi
, S.R
, Aul
akh,
P.S
, Ray
, S.;
Sark
ar,
M.B
., &
Chi
ttoor
, R. (
2010
, JIB
S)
Con
sequ
ence
sSu
rviv
al o
f the
fore
ign
subs
idia
ries o
f EM
NEs
Sout
h Ea
st A
sia
Indi
aG
arg,
M. &
Del
ios,
A. (
2007
, JIM
)
Surv
ival
of e
mer
ging
mar
ket f
irms i
n de
velo
ped
mar
kets
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Mill
er, S
.R.,
Thom
as, D
.E.,
Eden
, L.,
&
Hitt
, M. (
2008
, MIR
)
Con
tribu
tion
of o
utw
ard
dire
ct in
vest
men
t to
prod
uctiv
ity c
hang
es
with
in C
hina
, 199
1–20
07A
sia
Chi
naZh
ao, W
., Li
u, L
., &
Zha
o, T
. (20
10, J
IM)
Internationalization
130 | Page
Figure 4.3c: Research on EMNEs: Entry mode decision & mode of entry
Topi
c A
rea
Sub-
Topi
cSt
udy'
s Foc
usM
arke
t / R
egio
nC
ount
rySt
udy
Ow
ners
hip
Leve
lsB
alan
cing
priv
ate
and
stat
e ow
ners
hip
in e
mer
ging
mar
kets
' te
leco
mm
unic
atio
ns in
fras
truct
ure
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Doh
, J.P
., Te
egen
, H.,
& M
udam
bi, R
. (2
004,
JIB
S)
Ent
ry M
ode
Dec
isio
nLo
catio
n C
hoic
eA
sset
-exp
loita
tion
and
asse
t-see
king
asp
ects
are
pre
dict
ive
of th
e em
ergi
ng m
ultin
atio
nals
' loc
atio
n ch
oice
of i
nves
tmen
tA
sia
Taiw
anM
akin
o, S
., C
hung
-Min
g, L
., &
Yeh
, R
.S. (
2002
, JIB
S)
Partn
er S
elec
tion
Partn
er se
lect
ion
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Hitt
, M.A
., D
acin
, M.T
., Le
vita
s, E.
, A
rreg
le, J
.L.,
& B
orza
, A. (
2000
, AM
J)
Expe
rienc
e, im
itatio
n, a
nd th
e se
quen
ce o
f for
eign
ent
ry; S
outh
K
orea
n fir
ms i
n C
hina
Asi
aC
hina
Gui
llen,
M.F
. (20
03, J
IBS)
Patte
rn o
f Ent
ryC
hoic
e of
equ
ity st
ake
in a
n af
filia
te d
epen
ds u
pon
the
exte
nt o
f fa
mily
and
inst
itutio
nal s
hare
ow
ners
hips
in th
e pa
rent
com
pany
; Ta
iwan
ese
firm
s in
Chi
na
Asi
aC
hina
Fila
totc
hev,
I., S
trang
e, R
., Pi
esse
, J.,
&
Lien
, Y.C
. (20
07, J
IBS)
Sequ
ence
of v
alue
-add
ed a
ctiv
ities
in th
e m
ultin
atio
naliz
atio
n,
prod
uctio
n su
bsid
iarie
s vs.
mar
ketin
g su
bsid
iarie
sLa
tin A
mer
ica
----
-C
uerv
o-C
azur
ra, A
. (20
07, J
IM)
Rol
e of
refe
renc
e gr
oups
in in
tern
atio
nal i
nves
tmen
t dec
isio
ns b
y fir
ms f
rom
em
ergi
ng e
cono
mie
s, in
vest
men
ts in
Chi
na b
y EM
NEs
Asi
aC
hina
Li, J
.; Y
ao &
F.K
. (20
10, J
IM)
Alli
ance
s &
JV
s
Rol
e of
cog
nitiv
e bi
as in
dev
elop
ed m
arke
t ent
ry a
nd su
rviv
al:
Alli
ance
exp
erie
nce
with
MN
Es in
crea
ses t
he li
kelih
ood
of e
ntry
, but
de
crea
ses t
he li
kelih
ood
of su
rviv
alLa
tin A
mer
ica
----
-Th
omas
, D.E
., Ed
en, L
., H
itt, M
.A.,
&
Mill
er, S
.R. (
2007
, MIR
)
Inst
itutio
nal e
xpla
natio
ns o
f cro
ss-b
orde
r alli
ance
mod
es; i
nstit
utio
nal
effe
cts a
re c
ontin
gent
on
the
allia
nce
loca
tion
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Ang
, S.H
. & M
icha
ilova
, S. (
2008
, MIR
)
FDI t
hrou
gh M
NEs
as t
he p
rinci
pal s
ourc
e of
fore
ign
capi
tal f
or
deve
lopi
ng c
ount
ries,
exte
ndin
g re
sear
ch a
gend
aEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-R
amam
urti,
R. (
2004
, JIB
S)
Mod
e of
Ent
ryFD
I & A
cqui
sitio
nsD
eter
min
ants
of C
hine
se o
utw
ard
fore
ign
dire
ct in
vest
men
t.A
sia
Chi
naB
uckl
ey, P
.J, C
legg
, L.J.
, Cro
ss, A
.R.,
Liu,
X.,
Vos
s, H
., &
et a
l. (2
007,
JIB
S)
Cro
ss-b
orde
r acq
uisi
tions
and
firm
val
ueEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-A
ybar
, B. &
Fic
ici,
A. (
2009
, JIB
S)
Effe
ct o
f ow
ners
hip
stru
cutre
on
EMN
Es' o
utw
ard
FDI
Sout
h Ea
st A
sia
Indi
aB
haum
ik, S
.K.,
Drif
field
, N.,
& P
al, S
. (2
010,
JIB
S)
Inte
rnat
iona
l Ex
chan
ges
Effe
cts o
f ins
titut
iona
l env
ironm
ent o
n ex
port
beha
vior
s abo
ve a
nd
beyo
nd th
e im
pact
of f
irm c
ompe
tenc
ies a
nd in
dust
ry fa
ctor
s. A
sia
Chi
naG
ao, G
.Y.,
Mur
ray,
J.Y
., K
otab
e, M
., &
Lu
, J. (
2010
, JIB
S)
131 | Page
Figure 4.3d: Research on EMNEs: Competitive advantage
Topi
c A
rea
Sub-
Topi
cSt
udy'
s Foc
usM
arke
t / R
egio
nC
ount
rySt
udy
Scal
ing
up th
e va
lue
chai
n by
cop
ying
pro
duct
s of o
ther
s, ca
pabi
litie
s an
d co
nditi
ons
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Luo,
Y.,
Sun,
J., &
Wan
g, S
.L. (
2011
, A
MP)
Cap
abili
ties
Cap
abili
ties a
s a m
edia
tor l
inki
ng re
sour
ces a
nd i
nter
natio
nal
perf
orm
ance
Asi
aC
hina
Lu, Y
., Zh
ou, L
., B
ruto
n, G
., &
Li,
W.
(201
0, JI
BS)
Ass
et e
xplo
itatio
n fo
llow
ed b
y as
set s
eeki
ng b
ehav
ior;
lead
ersh
ip a
nd
dom
estic
dom
inan
ce m
ore
impo
rtant
than
CSA
sA
fric
aSo
uth
Afr
ica
Kle
in, S
.; W
öcke
, A. (
2007
, JIM
)
EMN
Es su
pple
men
t exp
loita
tion
stra
tegi
es w
ith e
xplo
ratio
n th
roug
h ne
w p
rodu
cts a
nd n
ew m
arke
ts e
mer
ge w
ith c
apab
ilitie
s tha
t cha
lleng
e M
NC
s fro
m th
e de
velo
ped
wor
ldEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-C
hitto
or, R
. & R
ay, S
. (20
07, J
IBS)
Ove
rcom
ing
the
liabi
lity
of fo
reig
nnes
s with
out s
trong
firm
ca
pabi
litie
sEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-B
arna
rd, H
. (20
10, J
IM)
Und
er w
hat c
ondi
tion
EMN
Es d
omes
tical
ly e
xplo
it ca
pabi
litie
s tha
t ha
ve b
een
deve
lope
d in
the
cour
se o
f int
erna
tiona
lizat
ion
Latin
Am
eric
a--
---
Boe
he, D
.M. (
2011
, JIM
)
Influ
ence
of
firm
-spe
cific
adv
anta
ges o
n su
bsid
iary
ow
ners
hip
leve
ls,
cont
inge
nt u
pon
subs
idia
ry l
ocat
ed in
a re
lativ
ely
less
- or a
mor
e-de
velo
ped
coun
try a
s com
pare
d to
the
hom
e co
untry
Asi
aSo
uth
Kor
eaEr
ram
illi,
M.K
., A
garw
al, S
., &
Seo
ng-
Soo,
K.
(199
7, JI
BS)
Itern
atio
nal e
xpan
sion
as a
sprin
g bo
ard
to a
cqui
re st
rate
gic
reso
urce
s, re
duce
ins
titut
iona
l and
mar
ket c
onst
rain
ts a
t hom
e, a
nd o
verc
ome
firm
-spe
cific
dis
adva
ntag
esEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-Lu
o, Y
. & T
ung,
R.L
. (20
07, J
IBS)
FSA
s & C
SAs
Tran
sfor
min
g di
sadv
anta
ges i
nto
adva
ntag
esEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-C
uerv
o-C
azur
ra, A
.; G
enc,
M. (
2008
, JIB
S)
Acq
uisi
tion
of c
ompl
emen
tary
reso
urce
s and
cap
abili
ties r
equi
red
to
trans
fer e
xist
ing
adva
ntag
es in
the
fore
ign
mar
ket a
nd d
evel
op n
ew
adva
ntag
es re
quire
d in
mor
e co
mpe
titiv
e en
viro
nmen
tsEm
ergi
ng m
arke
ts (g
ener
al)
----
-A
ulak
h, P
.S. (
2007
, JIM
)R
elat
ions
hips
bet
wee
n a
few
hom
e co
untry
-spe
cific
mac
roec
onom
ic
fact
ors a
nd o
utw
ard
FDI fl
ows
Asi
a, S
outh
Eas
t Asi
aC
hina
, Ind
iaTo
lent
iono
, P.E
. (20
10, J
IM)
Lear
ning
Expl
oita
tive
and
expl
orat
ive
lear
ning
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Li, P
.P. (
2010
, JIM
)
Com
petit
ive
Adv
anta
ges
132 | Page
Figure 4.3e: Research on EMNEs: Relationships & entrepreneurship
Topi
c A
rea
Sub-
Topi
cSt
udy'
s Foc
usM
arke
t / R
egio
nC
ount
rySt
udy
Futu
re o
f bus
ines
s gro
ups,
dive
rsifi
catio
n, th
resh
old
leve
lsLa
tin A
mer
ica
Chi
leK
hann
a, T
. & P
alep
u, K
. (20
00, A
MJ)
Bus
ines
s Gro
ups
Man
ager
ial p
robl
ems a
nd o
ppor
tuni
ties s
urro
undi
ng th
e ris
e an
d de
clin
e of
bus
ines
s gro
ups
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Gui
llen,
M.F
. (20
00, A
MJ)
Effe
cts o
f bus
ines
s gro
ups o
n in
nova
tion
in e
mer
ging
eco
nom
ies
Asi
aC
hina
, Tai
wan
Mah
moo
d, I.
& M
itche
ll, W
. (20
04, M
S)
Ass
ocia
tion
betw
een
inte
rnat
iona
l res
ourc
es a
nd m
arke
ts is
co
nditi
oned
by
time
and
busi
ness
gro
up a
ffili
atio
nSo
uth
East
Asi
aIn
dia
Chi
ttoor
, R.,
Sark
ar, M
.B.,
Ray
, S.,
&
Aul
akh,
P.S
. (20
09, O
S)
Inte
r-or
gani
zatio
nal
Rel
atio
nshi
ps
Estim
atin
g th
e pe
rfor
man
ce e
ffec
ts o
f bus
ines
s gro
ups i
n em
ergi
ng
mar
kets
; em
ergi
ng m
arke
ts: A
rgen
tina,
Bra
zil,
Chi
le, I
ndia
, Ind
ones
ia,
Isra
el, M
exic
o, P
eru,
the
Phili
ppin
es, S
outh
Kor
ea, T
aiw
an, T
haila
nd,
and
Turk
eyLa
tin A
mer
ica,
Asi
aV
ario
usK
hann
a, T
. & R
ivki
n, J.
W. (
2001
, SM
J)
Perf
orm
ance
per
sist
ence
and
the
impa
ct o
f bus
ines
s gro
up a
ffili
atio
nEm
ergi
ng a
nd d
evel
oped
m
arke
tsIn
dia,
USA
Cha
car,
A. &
Vis
sa, B
. (20
05, S
MJ)
Net
wor
ksSo
cial
net
wor
ks a
s an
effic
ient
mea
ns o
f hel
ping
inte
rnat
iona
lly
orie
nted
SM
Es to
go
inte
rnat
iona
l mor
e ra
pidl
y an
d pr
ofita
bly
Asi
aC
hina
Zhou
, L.,
Wu,
W.,
& L
uo, X
. (20
07, J
IBS)
Bui
ldin
g ca
pabi
litie
s for
inte
rnat
iona
l ope
ratio
ns th
roug
h ne
twor
ks,
smal
l and
med
ium
size
net
wor
ks m
ore
bene
ficia
lSo
uth
East
Asi
aIn
dia
Elan
go, B
. & P
attn
aik,
C. (
2007
, JIB
S)
Inno
vatio
n M
odel
s &
E
ntre
pren
eurs
hip
Inno
vatio
n M
odel
sSh
ift in
inno
vatio
n, d
evel
op in
nova
tive
capa
bilit
ies t
o m
ove
from
pr
oces
s to
prod
uct f
ocus
and
from
imita
tion
to in
nova
tion
Asi
a--
---
Li, J
. & K
ozhi
kode
, R.K
. (20
09, J
IM)
Inte
rnat
iona
l ven
turin
g, th
e ef
fect
s of f
irm c
apab
ilitie
s, ho
me
coun
try
netw
orks
, and
cor
pora
te e
ntre
pren
eurs
hip
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Yiu
, D.W
, Lau
, C.M
., &
Bru
ton,
G.D
. (2
007,
JIB
S)
Entre
pren
eurs
hip
Proc
esse
s tha
t lin
k gl
obal
izat
ion
to e
ntre
pren
eurs
hip
in e
mer
ging
ec
onom
ies:
spill
over
and
cat
ch u
p, b
roke
ring
and
botto
m u
p.
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Hill
, T.L
. & M
udam
bi, R
. (20
10, J
IM)
Inst
itutio
nal s
trate
gies
ava
ilabl
e to
ent
repr
eneu
rs in
em
ergi
ng m
arke
ts
such
as
Emer
ging
mar
kets
(gen
eral
)--
---
Trac
ey, P
. & P
hilli
ps, N
. (20
11, A
MR
)
133 | Page
Following the idea that the value of resources is contingent on time and
location (Amit & Schoemaker, 1993; Brush & Artz, 1999; Hu, 1995; Tallman, 1992)
and that a source of advantage can become later a source of disadvantage
(Leonard-‐Barton, 1992), some scholars argue that despite their liability of
emergingness deriving from underdeveloped institutional environments (Madhok,
2010), EMNEs are successful in their internationalization (Cuervo-‐Cazurra, 2011;
Curvo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008; Govindarajan & Ramamurti, 2011; Ramamurti,
2009a; Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a). EMNEs learn to work around institutional
voids (Khanna & Palepu, 1997) and transform this home disadvantage into a
source of relative advantage when they expand to other economies with the same
or even more difficult institutional conditions (Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008).
Elaborating on the exploitation perspective, other scholars suggest that
EMNEs possess a variety of other ownership advantages than just low costs or
experience in operating within institutional voids (Guillen & Gracia-‐Canal, 2009;
Lessard & Lucea, 2008; Williamson & Zeng, 2008), which translate into significant
competitive advantage in local markets and in other emerging markets depicted
by similar institutional environments (Ramamurti, 2009a, 2009b; Sim & Pandian,
2003), such as profound knowledge of underdeveloped and low-‐income
consumers, human capital in the form of entrepreneurial skills and international
social networks, such as links with the diaspora, large labor pools and home
markets, ability to adapt imported technology to develop products suited to the
special needs of local customers in emerging markets, ability to optimize
production processes by using more labor and less capital, and in some cases the
support from the home government in the form of preferred access to markets,
preferential regulations, or preferred access to capital (Lall, 1983; Lecraw, 1977;
Ramamurti, 2009a; Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a; Wells 1983; Williamson & Zeng,
2008). In their analysis of twelve Taiwanese and Singaporean firms, Sim and
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Pandian (2003) found that the EMNEs’ strategic advantages derived from low cost,
responsiveness and knowledge of local markets.
While traditional views on internationalization are embedded in the
exploitation perspective, which explains that firms make the most of their rent
yielding ownership advantages through internationalization into foreign markets
(Buckley & Casson, 1976; Hymer 1976), recent stream of literature argues that
EMNEs rely too heavily on their country and firm specific advantages for their
international competitiveness (Rugman, 2009) and that they possess only
‘ordinary resources’ (Madhok, 2010) or only few intangible ownership advantages,
such as brands and technology (Ramamurti, 2009a, 2009b). These recent studies
follow the exploration perspective where EMNEs internationalize motivated by
gaining access to and internalize strategic resources (Capron, Dussauge, &
Mitchell, 1998; Ethiraj & Levinthal, 2004; Gubbi et al., 2010; Madhok, 2010) in
order to reduce their emerging market home-‐country effect (Cuervo-‐Cazurra,
2011), enhance their strategic renewal (Nelson, 2005; Gubbi et al., 2010), and
facilitate quicker transformation by enabling transfer of status and reputation
which helps EMNEs to overcome the liabilities of emergingness in global markets
(Madhok, 2010). EMNEs acquire financial capital and management skills (Lyles &
Baird, 1994; McDonald, 1993; Stoever, 1996), as well as other intangible assets,
such as technology, brands, and know-‐how to establish presence as world-‐class
players (Aulakh, 2007; Luo & Tung, 2007; Madhok, 2010; Mathews, 2002).
Such inorganic growth through acquisitions in developed markets offers
EMNEs the possibility to leapfrog conventional growth cycles and permits rapid
internationalization of intangible resources, which are difficult to trade through
market mechanisms, take time and are path dependent to develop internally
(Coff, 1999; Gupta & Govindarajan, 2000). Acquisitions facilitate quicker
transformation by enabling transfer of status and reputation which help EMNEs to
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overcome the liabilities of emergingness in global markets and allow the
integration of new and diverse organizational practices with their traditional
management techniques (Cuervo-‐Cazurra, Maloney, & Manrakhan 2007;
Uhlenbruck, Hitt, & Semadeni, 2006; Vermeulen & Barkema, 2002). Chittoor and
Ray (2007) studied internationalizing firms in India and they too found evidence of
firms' international expansion driven by exploitation of local advantages, but they
also found equally compelling evidence of firms rapidly exploring and acquiring
resources and capabilities to develop state-‐of-‐the-‐art products and move up the
value chain. The implication is that EMNEs not only pursue different strategies in
their international expansion, but they do so with different core logic of how to
operate in different institutional environments.
4.2.2 Notion of the business model
This turns the spotlight on the business model as the core logic of how firms
operate, create and capture value (Baden-‐Fuller et al., 2010; Demil & Lecocq,
2010) that reflects the firm’s realized strategy (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart,
2010). EMNEs not only expand to foreign markets with distinctive business models
but they also manage their business models differently in the different markets
under different conditions. In light of EMNEs’ increasing global presence and
competitiveness with Western firms, as well as the exploitation and exploration
perspectives on ownership advantages of EMNEs, the business model, as a
representation of firms’ underlying strategic choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell &
Ricart, 2010; Shafer et al., 2005), offers a particularly interesting insight into the
context of EMNEs’ internationalization. Scholars acknowledge that firms do not
employ and execute their business models in a competitive vacuum but instead
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compete through their business models (Amit & Zott, 2014; Casadesus-‐Masanell &
Ricart, 2010; Zott & Amit, 2007, 2008).
Issues relating to how and why firms from emerging markets
internationalize, and more specifically, what strategies they adopt or need to
adopt, constitutes an interesting and underexposed area of international
management and business research. The notion of business models and how they
allow EMNEs to create, deliver, and capture value has remained rather absent in
the extant literature on EMNEs internationalization (see Table 4.2, Figure 4.2 and
Figures 4.3a – 4.3e). Without an adequate focus on the notion of business models,
we are lacking a holistic picture of EMNEs’ different internationalization strategies.
The competitiveness of EMNEs in new markets is related to how their business
models interact with the new ecosystems, producing offerings that add value to
the participants in these environments and allow them to capture part of the
value created. Therefore, the design of the business model is a crucial decision to
be taken by EMNEs to ensure that their business models are rethought in order to
adapt to new environments (Bowien, Vives, & Laudien, 2015; Zott & Amit, 2010).
Despite a conceptual pluralism that has uncovered novel ways to explain
what business models are and how they work (Bowien & Vives, 2013; George &
Bock, 2011; Spieth, Schneckenberg, & Ricart, 2014; Zott et al., 2011), scholars
broadly agree on the activity-‐system perspective of the business model in which
the business model depicts a system and orchestration of interdependent
activities performed by the focal firm and stakeholders in the ecosystem. The
firm’s business model as an activity system, depicting the design elements of
content, structure, and governance of activities (Amit & Zott, 2001; Zott & Amit,
2010), may transcend the focal firm and span its boundaries, but it will always
remain firm-‐centric to enable the focal firm to create value with its stakeholders
but also to capture a share of the value created itself through the exploitation of
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business opportunities (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Chesbrough &
Rosenbloom, 2002; Svejenova et al., 2010; Teece, 2007), but also through the
exploration of new business opportunities.
The organizational perspective on business models takes a configurative
approach and describes how the pieces of a business fit together (Afuah & Tucci,
2001; Magretta, 2002), as the business model is a complex set of interdependent
activities that are ‘discovered, adjusted, and fine-‐tuned by doing’ (Winter &
Szulanski, 2001, p. 731). They can lead to the creation of new strategic resources
and open up alternatives for future value creation and appropriation. The business
model is a useful notion that enhances the understanding, labeling and
classification of firms’ operations (Baden-‐Fuller & Morgan, 2010), depicts an
overarching meta-‐model and provides a framework that allows for analyzing
internationalization trajectories of EMNEs in a comprehensive way within and
across EMNEs’ boundaries and across different institutional environments. As
such, it offers a holistic picture of EMNEs’ different internationalization strategies.
Hereby, the question of fit of the business model is very important. The
internal fit among activities ensures that the business model has a coherent
configuration of activities, while external fit refers to the appropriateness of the
configuration of activities given the environmental conditions affecting the
business model (Siggelkow, 2001). Adding or removing activities and resources is
about changes in the scope of the business model and “changing the scope of the
organization not only affects the extent to which it can capture the fruits of its
innovative labor; but it also affects the extent to which it can be innovative in the
future” (Jacobides, Knudsen, & Augier, 2006). The business model plays a
particularly crucial role in the context of EMNEs expanding to foreign markets.
EMNEs modify and reconfigure the activities of their business models in ways that
adjust their external fit and enable them to operate in other challenging
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institutional environments besides their home markets (Vermeulen & Barkema,
2002), compete against multinational enterprises (MNEs) from developed
countries (Dawar & Frost, 1999), but also acquire strategic resources in developed
markets (Madhok, 2010).
The level of the institutional environment in a market directly affects the
firm’s incentives and ability to reconfigure its activities in the business model
(Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008) by challenging the external fit between the
business model and the external environment (Nelson, 1995) that in turn
facilitates and challenges transactions (North, 1990). Thus, the market
development as the degree to which capital and labor markets, legal systems, and
commercial value chains are established and developed in support of business
activities (Chakrabarti, Vidal, & Mitchell, 2011; Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Dau, 2009)
impacts the design and management of EMNEs’ business models. Differences in
institutional environments across countries lead to different strategic initiatives
(Chakrabarti et al., 2011) and therefore to different choices of distinctive business
models (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Shafer et al., 2005). Consequently,
the different internationalization strategies pursued by EMNEs lead to different
reconfigurations of the business model’s activity system and to different business
model management strategies.
4.3 Internationalization and Business Model
Management Strategies
From March’s (1991) description of exploration and exploitation we deduct
and further advance that temporal performance’s focus and risk associated with
the management of business models during internationalization of EMNEs are
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closely intertwined with the level of exploration and exploitation in the
internationalization trajectories. Benefits of exploration of new ownership
advantages are distant in time and are highly unpredictable, whereas benefits
associated with exploiting current ownership advantages are proximal in time and
more certain (Levinthal & March, 1993; March, 1991; March, 1995; March &
Simon, 1958). Thus, when risk reduction and short-‐term performance optimization
of activities take priority, exploitation-‐oriented internationalization will be
preferred by EMNEs. “The essence of exploitation is the refinement and extension
of existing competences, technologies, and paradigms. Its returns are positive,
proximate, and predictable.” (March, 1991: 85). Exploitation entails a response to
environmental needs through optimization of external fit of the business model. It
enables bottom-‐up learning, allows institutionalizing of reliable behaviors into
routines (Harry & Schroeder, 2000; Nonaka, 1994), focuses on selection and
refinement of existing activities, and builds on a firm’s existing business model; its
output solidifies existing technological knowledge base of the firm (Cohen &
Levinthal, 1989; March, 1991; March & Simon, 1958; Rosenkopf & Nerkar, 2001;
Weick, 1979).
On the other hand, when the corresponding uncertainty is willingly accepted
and long-‐term performance improvement takes priority, exploration-‐oriented
internationalization will be pursued by EMNEs. “The essence of exploration is
experimentation with new alternatives. Its returns are uncertain, distant, and
often negative.” (March, 1991: 85). Uncertainty of outcomes and novelty of
alternatives in EMNEs internationalization trajectories constitute two parameters
of the definition. In line with a broader discussion on complementarities in
economics (Milgrom & Roberts, 1990), the unpredictability of the
interdependencies among known business model activities and elements cause
the uncertainty in outcomes. Exploration departs from the current business model
of the firm and involves a shift to a different technological trajectory and
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experimentation with new alternatives. It further enables flexibility, discovery, and
innovation, and its output broadens the technological knowledge base of the firm
(Cohen & Levinthal, 1989; March, 1991; March & Simon, 1958; Rosenkopf &
Nerkar, 2001; Weick, 1979). Internationalization of EMNEs involves, both
exploitation and exploration of ownership advantages to orchestrate the activities
of the business model and adjust the internal and external fit of the business
model influenced by emergent conditions internal and external to the firm.
In this sense, external reconfiguration of activities of the business model
through acquisition of businesses allows firms to gain access to strategic resources
and develop new capabilities while preventing organizational inertia (Rosenkopf &
Nerkar, 2001; Vermeulen & Barkema, 2001). Creation of new advantages through
external reconfiguration allows EMNEs to redeploy newly obtained managerial
and financial resources (Capron et al., 1998), create new processes for future
growth (Capron & Mitchell, 2009), and change faster and at a broader scope as
opposed to internal development of activities (Karim & Mitchell, 2000). Internal
reconfiguration of the activity systems of the business model allows EMNEs to
expand through the exploitation of their firm-‐specific advantages, competencies
and knowledge (Caves, 1974; Helfat, 1994) by leveraging their own traditional
business models to other markets. EMNEs are able to capture large portions of
their value creation by reconfiguring activities in their business model in ways that
suit the specific institutional and market conditions in emerging economies
(Khanna & Palepu, 1997), which they exploit and internally reconfigure while
expanding to foreign markets (Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a).
Some scholars claim that the more a firm excels in some competencies and a
particular design of the business model, the more it is likely to exploit those
competencies and the business model instead of developing a new one (March,
1991). Firms tend to understand internal routines better than acquired ones
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(Karim & Mitchell, 2004; Wiersema & Bowen, 2011) and usually favor the familiar
(Ahuja & Lampert, 2001; Christensen & Bower, 1996). Extant literature further
implies that institutionally different markets, such as emerging and developed
markets, require fundamentally different business models and business model
management strategies due to the differences in institutional infrastructure,
market development, customer demands and needs, as well as resource
availability and external fit with the environments. Firms operating in these
distinctive markets differ in their core logics of value creation and appropriation
and consequently they organize their activity systems differently according to the
complexity of the environmental context, interconnectedness of the ecosystems
and the underlying strategic initiatives. Our discussion suggests that EMNEs’
internationalization trajectories do not follow either an exploitation or exploration
strategy but they rather resemble ambidexterity that centers on simultaneous
exploration and exploitation (O’Reilly & Tushman, 2008) of EMNEs during their
internationalization trajectories. The arguments put forward in this section lead to
our baseline proposition:
Proposition 0: EMNEs do not internationalize through either the
exploitation of the existent business model or the exploration of a
new business model but rather through the ambidextrous
management of the business model.
4.3.1 Conceptual framework
Integrating extant literature after a critical review (Tables 4.1 and 4.2,
Figures 4.2 and 4.3a-‐e), we conclude that rather than adopting an either/or
perspective, we are be better off approaching the topic of EMNEs’
internationalization from a contingency perspective. This idea is used in Figure 4.4,
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which classifies EMNEs’ internationalization strategies along two dimensions.
Specifically, from the literature review we identify two key variables that influence
how EMNEs internationalize and how they manage their business models during
internationalization: (1) degree of institutional difference with regard to entry into
an emerging market or a developed market; and (2) EMNEs’ strategic initiatives in
terms of either leveraging their traditional business model through the
exploitation of ownership advantages or developing new business models through
the exploration of new ownership advantages.
Conceptually, by plotting these two dimensions in a matrix as presented in
Figure 4.4 below, we obtain four possible internationalization trajectories and
business model management strategies can EMNEs pursue: 1) leveraging of
traditional business model in other emerging markets, similar in environmental
and constitutional environments to the home country, which is based on pure
exploitation strategy hinging on ownership advantages similar to existing ones in
the domestic market; 2) leveraging of traditional business model in developed
markets, which is based on exploitation of ownership advantages in developed
markets through the same products and service offerings; 3) developing new
business model in other emerging markets, similar in environmental and
constitutional environments to the home country, which is based on exploration
of new advantages through new product and service offerings; 4) developing new
business model in developed markets, which hinges on a pure exploration strategy
involving new products and service offerings and new developed markets.
We explore the validity of our conceptual framework through illustrations of
eight case studies of different EMNEs (Tables 4.3 and 4.4, and Figure 4.5). Figure
4.4 is designed to suggest the ambidexterity of EMNEs’ internationalization and
subsequent business model management, not to suggest that the world can be
neatly divided into four quadrants. These four distinctions of internationalization
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strategy are important because they give us insight into how EMNEs manage and
innovate their business models during internationalization and why some EMNEs
are potentially successful in expanding to other markets and why others fail.
Figure 4.4: Internationalization strategies of emerging multinationals
Source: Own creation.
Table 4.3: Case studies of emerging multinationals
Company Country of origin Main industrySales(US $ millions)
Net Income(US $ millions) Employees
Target countries (#)
AMÉRICA MÓVIL Mexico Telecommunication 49,220.60 7,354.20 55,000 18
CEMEX Mexico Concrete 14,434.50 -1,337.40 46,500 35
EMBRAER Brazil Aerospace 5,216.20 314.70 17,009 5
NATURA Brazil Cosmetics 3,082.90 446.60 6,260 9
ENKA HOLDING Turkey Construction / Engineering 4,941.87 513.19 13,070 18
LENOVO China Computers 24,394.02 395.26 26,341 160+
TATA MOTORS India Automotive 27,629.40 1,653.80 52,244 NA
* Source: Company Financials as at Sept. 2010
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Table 4.4a: Summary of case study illustrations
Attributes Tata Motors (Trucks) Tata Motors (Commercial cars)
Origin India India
Industry Automotive: Trucks Automotive: Commercial cars
Founded 1945 1945
Internationalization History - 2004: acquisition of Daewoo's truck manufacturing unit in South Korea, now known as Tata Daewoo Commercial Vehicle- 2005: acquisition of 21% of Aragonese Hispano Carrocera giving it controlling rights of the company- 2007: joint venture with Marcopolo of Brazil and introduction of low-floor buses in the Indian Market
- 2007: acquisition of British Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), which includes the Daimler and Lanchester brand names- 2010: acquisition of 80% stake in Italy-based design and engineering company Trilix in line with the company’s objective to enhance its styling/design capabilities to global standards.
Target Countries Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Namibia, Mozambique, Uganda, Ghana and South Africa
USA, Europe
Traditional Business Model Summary Inexpensive cars for modular distribution Inexpensive cars for modular distribution
Key Activities manufacturing, oursourcing, partnerships with vendors
manufacturing, oursourcing, partnerships with vendors
Approach / Business Model Innovation Management of the development of new products and not trying to develop everything in-house; moving from a hierarchical model to a collaborative approach
Focus on barnd equity, technology, dhigh end design, focus on Western markets
Uniqueness Customer foucs and strong collaborations with suppliers
Customer foucs and strong collaborations with suppliers
Strategic Need / Motivation Overseas expansion;voulume sales in the low-income market; expand the brand
Gain access to Western markets, ie USA and Europe; luxury brand association
Business Model Management Strategy Single business model strategy:Leveraging of traditional business model in emerging markets
Dual business models:Developing new business model in developed markets
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Table 4.4b: Summary of case study illustrations
Attributes América Móvil Embraer
Origin Mexico Brazil
Industry Telecommuniation Aircraft manufacturing
Founded 2000 (spin off from former state-owned Telmex)
1969 - 1994 State-owned enterprise, then 1994 onward privatization of the commercial aircraft division
Internationalization History - 2001-2003 bought out several distressed assets in Latin America - acquisitions helped to strengthen position in Brazil;- 2002 acquired one of Brazil's wirelss operators from BellSouth- 2003-2004 purchse of AT&T's Latin America's assets and US telecoms company, MCI Worldcom's Latin American assets
- Internationalization started in 1995 after the privatization - development of new business model- Embraer’s operations are strategically located worldwide, with large operations in the Americas, Europe, and Asia
Target Countries 17 countries in the Caribbean and Latin America such as Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay, Puerto Rico; Comcel Colombia in Colombia; and Porta in Ecuador. In Brazil it operates the trademark Claro. Inthe US it operates under the trademarks TracFone, Net10, and Straight Talk.
Brazil, USA, Portugal, France, Singapore, China
Traditional Business Model Summary Pre-paid business model Reverse outsourcing business model
Key Activities Customer acquisition, telecommunication services, pre-paid card services, billing, acquisitions
Use of best suppliers in developed markets to supply its own needs, exploitation of strategic alliances, customer focued organization (take customer suggestions in the design phase)
Approach / Business Model Innovation Volume sales in the low-income market - Embraer has found the best way to reach its global customers while leveraging the research capabilities of talent from multiple areas- Instead of making components for big firms in the advanced economies, Embraer draws on the best component suppliers in developed markets to supply its own needs
Uniqueness Up-to-date roaming technology and strong business around pre-paid model
Mix of customer focus and entreprenurial spirit
Strategic Need / Motivation Overseas expansion;voulume sales in the low-income market through pre-paid cards
Overseas expansion; serving developed markets customers
Business Model Management Strategy Single business model strategy: Leveraging of traditional business model in emerging markets
Single business model:Leveraging of traditional business model in developed markets
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Table 4.4c: Summary of case study illustrations
Attributes Cemex Enka Holding
Origin Mexico Tukey
Industry Cement Real estate development
Founded 1906 1957
Internationalization History - 1992: Purchase of Spain's two largest cement companiesin- 1994: Acquisition of Venezuela's largest cement company, as well as plants in the US and Panama- 1995: Acquisition of a cement company in the Dominican Republic- 1996: Purchase of a majority stake in a Colombian cement company1997-1999: Expansion of scope to include Asia and Africa, making major purchases in the Philippines, Indonesia and Egypt, and Costa Rica; acquisition of U.S. based Southdown made CEMEX the largest cement company in North America- 2001: Acquisition of a Thai company- 2002: Acquisition of a Puerto Rican company- 2005: Acquisition of London-based RMC Group- 2007: Acquisition of the Rinker Group, Limited
- 1993: ENKA, with its joint venture partner Bechtel, signed a series of contracts in Kazakhstan for various projects for the development of the Tengiz Oil Field.- early 1990s: Foundation of two joint stock companies, Mosenka and Moskva Krasnye Holmy, to develop and manage office and residential buildings in Moscow.- 2002 - today: Completion of more than 130 projects in Russia and CIS, ranging from buildings, hospitals and industrial plants to oil and gas projects; mega-highway project in Romania, a brand new city in Oman, a new terminal at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport, a football stadium in Donetsk, Ukraine, a Toyota car factory in St. Petersburg, Russia and oil field infrastructure on Sakhalin Island in Russia.
Target Countries Serves the international cement market through acquisitions of key assets in strategic locations Europe, USA, Asia, Australia
Enka has 37 subsidiaries engaged in a diverse range of construction activities including power generation, airports, petroleum, and roadways. Enka primarily operates in Turkey, Russia, Africa, Middle East, and East and Central Europe.
Traditional Business Model Summary Post-merger integration business model - the 'Cemex' way - based on sinle global identity, common organizational structures and operating processes, common technological platform, centralized back-office functions and strong fopcus on operational best practices, business process gap analysis, benchmarking and performance measurement
Technology driven turnkey soultions
Key Activities Use of high-tech technology in low-tech industry, effective approach to acquisitions and post-mrger integration, smart marketing and branding strategy
Solution design, development, engineering, investments and finance
Approach / Business Model Innovation Targets undervalued or underperforming assets, which it believes have the potential for operational efficiency improvements; focus on established palyers with substantial market share; growth markets
Enters challenging emerging markets by opening new subsidiaries and development of new business models for each new project; international construction projects serve as engine of growth for the future
Uniqueness Post-merger integration: detecting cost savings, identify and retain talent, implement the Cemex business model
Modern technologies, innovative solutions
Strategic Need / Motivation Overseas expansion; gain access to strategic assets such as capital and access to other markets
Gain access to a location advantage in the host country
Business Model Management Strategy Single business model:Leveraging of traditional business model in developed markets
Dual business models:Developing new business model in emerging markets
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Table 4.4d: Summary of case study illustrations
Attributes Naturs Cosmeticos Lenovo
Origin Brazil China
Industry Cosmetics, fragrances and personal hygiene Computer manufacturing
Founded 1969 1984
Internationalization History - 1974: Introduction of direct sales as sales model- 2008: more than 800,000 " beauty consultants" (resellers) spread throughout Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, France, Mexico and Peru- Expansion through marketing subsidiaries
- 1988: Hong Kong Legend established- 1989: Legend Computer Group Co. followed in mainland China- 1990: the first Legend PC was launched to the market, pioneering the PC industry in China:- 1996: Legend, the market leader in China- 1999 Lenovo gained first position in the Asia-Pacific region- 2006: Acquisition of IBM’s Personal Computing Division in the US
Target Countries Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, France, Mexico, Peru USAAs the final piece in their business model, to secure future growth, Lenovo relies on sales in China but it has set as a priority to increase its presence in other emerging markets to replicate its Chinese success, notably Brazil, India and Russia.
Traditional Business Model Summary Direct sales model with baeuty consultants Relevant innovation for the user - Lenovo's business model is built on innovation, operational efficiency and customer satisfaction as well as a focus on investment in emerging markets
Key Activities Ethical stance in production and advertisements, direct sales, beauty consultants, low cost R&D and innovation
R&D, sales, technical support, innovation ( innovation center, with the aim to catalyze customer collaboration in their new PC solutions)
Approach / Business Model Innovation Low cost way to support its own product development of natural products, door-to-door sales women; R&D and marketing merged to bring technology and sales together in order to accelerate new product's commercial acceptance
Miantains its traditonal business model in China and other emerging markets and the acquired US business model for the US market
Uniqueness low cost innovation and R&D; door-to-door sales with beauty consultants
Innovation and technological soulutions
Strategic Need / Motivation Gain access to new markets and cutomers Gain access to Western markets, ie USA
Business Model Management Strategy Dual business models:Developing new business model in emerging markets
Dual business models:Developing new business model in developed markets
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4.3.2 Leveraging of traditional business model in emerging markets
Internationalization directed toward other emerging countries, which are
similar in institutional and environmental conditions, by leveraging the own
traditional business model is a way to diversify away from the domestic market
into similar markets while maintaining the domestic market as the primary market
(Lall, 1983). EMNEs design and innovate their business models at home
(Ramamurti & Singh, 2009a) in the way their products and services are financed,
distributed, and sold in emerging markets because of various institutional voids
that characterize their home environment (Khanna, Palepu, & Sinha, 2005). When
EMNEs internationalize to other emerging markets by leveraging of their
traditional business models (Figure 4.4, cell 1), based on the exploitation of their
own country and firm specific advantages, they follow a single business model
strategy.
This means that they maintain the value proposition offered to customers in
the home market, the way they deliver the value proposition and capture value for
the firm, and the way the firm’s activities are organized in the business model,
which demonstrated a strong external fit between the activities and resources of
the firm and the challenging institutional environment in the domestic market.
Here, EMNEs maintain the content, as well as the underlying structure and the
governance of their activity system. There is always a potential need for a marginal
business model adaptation in form of adding, eliminating or changing of one or
several activities of the business model content, but the core traditional business
model in terms of structure and governance developed in the home market
remains unchanged. EMNEs expand their traditional home business model and
employ it in other emerging markets characterized by low level of institutional
difference, where they are familiar with a similar institutional environment, and
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know how to operate within such. This trajectory reduces risk of
internationalization and promises higher short-‐term performance.
The strategy of internationalization by leveraging of the traditional business
model from home is further characterized by capital-‐intensive tangible and
intangible outputs in closed systems that allow for a high degree of
standardization and an exploitation of economies of scale. Challenged by changing
ecosystem conditions in host markets targeted for expansion EMNEs are in need
to rethink and reorganize their business model design and their value creation and
capture processes (Lerch, 2014; Ramirez, 1999) and thus to adjust their business
models if necessary. However, this internationalization strategy of leveraging of
the traditional business model is usually the predominant solution for EMNEs that
do not actively need to change their business model design and value creation and
capture processes. This internationalization strategy is very efficiency-‐centered.
Therefore, to detail our research question, this discussion suggests the following
proposition:
Proposition 1: Internationalization through leveraging of the
traditional business model to emerging and developing markets is
positively related to risk reduction and firm-‐performance, thereby
increasing organizational efficiency.
We illustrate the internationalization strategy of leveraging of the traditional
business model to emerging markets by drawing on examples of two case studies
of EMNEs, namely (1) América Móvil, the Mexican mobile company, and (2) Tata
Motors, one of the companies of the Indian giant business group Tata (Figure 4.5,
cell 1). Table 4.4 presents details of the two case study illustrations. América
Móvil, the Mexican mobile company, has grown sixfold since its spin-‐off from
former state-‐owned monopoly, Teléfonos de México (Telmex) in 2000 by crafting
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a successful pre-‐paid and call-‐card business model for markets with low-‐income
consumers who lack a positive credit rating. This business model allowed the
company to unlock shareholder value and provided a branding vehicle to expand
its wireless business (Casanova, 2009).
América Móvil leveraged its business model across other emerging and
developing markets with low-‐income consumers by acquiring distressed
companies and integrating them directly into the activity system of its traditional
business model at home. Following this strategy, América Móvil maintained the
same value proposition, delivery and capture. It changed the activity system
content by adding new activities in terms of the acquired firms, and it integrated
the acquired business models directly into its traditional business model thereby
maintaining the same structure and governance of activities. América Móvil
leveraged its business model to other emerging and developing markets in terms
of institutional and environmental similarity by exploiting its ownership advantage
of the ability to efficiently serve the low-‐income customer base and achieve high
economies of scale.
India’s Tata group companies follow the same single business model strategy
in emerging markets similar to the home market with respect to institutional and
environmental conditions. For example, Tata Motors produces trucks without
technologically advanced components and systems but with strong and rigid
suspension system that can withstand the challenges of India’s unpaved, rutted
rural roads. These vehicles can be easily maintained and repaired by locals without
formal training in mechanics, while the necessary spare parts do not pose any
constraints. Therefore, Tata Motors is able to leverage its trucks business model to
developing countries such as Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Namibia, Mozambique,
Uganda, Ghana and South Africa (Veliyath & Brouthers, 2010). It maintains
thereby the value proposition, delivery and capture. Moreover, Tata Motors does
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not make any changes to its business model content, structure, or governance and
maintains an efficiency-‐focused business model design. The minor adjustments in
terms of exportation do not change the overall business model.
4.3.3 Leveraging of traditional business model in developed markets
Literature argues that EMNEs have only ‘ordinary resources’ (Madhok, 2010)
and only few intangible ownership advantages, such as brands and technology
(Ramamurti, 2009a; Ramamurti & Singh, 2009b), and they are more familiar with
conducting business and operating in difficult institutional environments in
emerging economies (Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2009). Yet, EMNEs enter developed
markets by leveraging their traditional business models from home (Figure 4.4, cell
2). The strong institutional infrastructure and greater market development present
in developed markets facilitate higher degree of internal and external
reconfiguration of resources and activities in EMNEs’ business models (Khanna &
Palepu, 1999). It allows EMNEs to leverage their own business model into
developed markets, acquire complementary resources, and integrate them fast
into their own business model. The main objective is to acquire strategic resources
for further international expansion, such as for instance developed markets firms’
financial resources, credit rankings, and managerial skills. Because of the fast
integration of any business model innovation through acquisition into the
traditional business model, EMNEs that follow this internationalization strategy
into developed markets can leverage their traditional business model thereby
focusing on an efficiency-‐driven business model design that reduces risk and
increases performance and the firm’s welfare.
In order to create and appropriate more value during the international
expansion, EMNEs that enter developed markets via a single business model
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strategy by leveraging their own business models do so by first developing
innovative business models at home to roll out to many different markets in
developed economies thereby following an efficiency-‐driven approach. Despite
the resources disadvantage, some EMNEs are able to reconfigure their activities
and resources internally and externally through acquisition in a way to increase
value creation and value capture in emerging markets and exploit these business
models in developed markets, as well by focusing on needs of lead customers in
developed markets during their business model innovation at home. Since
emerging economies differ from developed economies in the per capita income of
average consumers, the mass consumer markets in emerging economies, except
for the top of the pyramid in these markets, require business models based on
value products and services characterized by low cost, functionality, different
price-‐performance value proposition, and ‘good-‐enough-‐quality’ that demand
different competencies (Govindarajan & Ramamurti, 2011; Ramamurti, 2009a).
There are low to mid-‐end consumers in developed markets for whom the
‘good-‐enough-‐quality’ products at low prices have appeal. This is the mirror image
of the assumption many multinationals from developed markets predicate their
strategies on, namely that products from developed markets have appeal to
consumers at the top of the pyramid in emerging markets (Govindarajan &
Ramamurti, 2011). Aligned with business models designed around value offerings,
EMNEs leverage their own traditional business models from home by moving up
the value chain on the basis of low labor costs and fast-‐growing domestic markets.
They transform their business models by moving up the value chain from original
equipment manufacturers selling their own products with a Western firm’s brand
affixed to original design manufacturers or original brand manufacturers
leveraging their value business models in developed markets through foreign
direct investment (Bonaglia et al., 2007; Duysters et al., 2009, Goldstein &
Bonaglia, 2005).
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Consequently, EMNEs following this internationalization strategy change the
content, structure, and/or governance at home before leveraging the new
business model to developed economies. Novelty generation, which aims at
creating an advantage for the firm as opposed to efficiency generation, which aims
at reducing the organizational risk (Amit & Zott, 2015), prior to internationalization
contributes to the business model innovation and orchestration of the activity
system necessary to realize and address the envisioned leverage of the business
model to developed economies (Bonaglia et al., 2007; Jacobides et al., 2006). The
leveraging itself is based on a single business model strategy. This means that the
resulting business model at home is more likely to be novel and turns toward
efficiency during the internationalization, which emphasizes that a novel solution
can perfectly be more efficient as well. Novelty-‐centered design and efficiency-‐
centered design are not necessarily mutually exclusive (Zott & Amit, 2007). Our
discussion suggests the following proposition:
Proposition 2: Internationalization through leveraging of the
traditional business model to developed markets is positively related
to risk reduction and firm-‐performance, thereby increasing
organizational efficiency following a novelty-‐design in the traditional
business model that is leveraged.
Three rising emerging multinationals in the home appliances industry,
namely Haier from China, Mabe from Mexico, and Arçelik from Turkey offer
interesting illustrations of the single business model internationalization strategy
into developed markets pursued by EMNEs (Bonaglia et al., 2007; Goldstein,
2008). These EMNEs have developed into competitive EMNEs as original
equipment manufacturers selling their own products with a foreign firm’s brand
affixed. Some of them are also enhancing their own competencies and innovate
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their business models as either original design manufacturers or original brand
manufacturers. Subsequently, they try to leverage their novel business models in
developed markets through foreign direct investment (Goldstein & Bonaglia,
2005).
Other illustrations of EMNEs that follow the same internationalization
strategy are Cemex from Mexico, which is one of the world’s biggest suppliers of
ready-‐mix concrete, and Embraer from Brazil, which is a manufacturer of
commercial aircrafts, offer a glimpse into internationalization by leveraging the
business model across developed markets (Figure 4.5, cell 2). Table 4.4 presents
details of the two case study illustrations. Both companies successfully developed
innovative business models at home prior to their international expansion. The
EMNEs changed first the content of their activity system by reconfiguring the
activities in the traditional business models, which required a new structure of
activities, in terms of new relationships with foreign suppliers and acquisitions of
new companies, and new governance policies regarding the new structure and
new content of the business model. This allowed the firms, both Cemex and
Embraer, to change their value proposition designed for the new developed
markets, different value delivery in new markets and consequently new value
appropriation potential as opposed to the home market. Changes took place at
home and the EMNEs expanded then their novel business models to developed
markets following a single business strategy.
For example, the position that Brazilian Embraer enjoyed in recent years in
commercial aircrafts for commuter and regional airlines demonstrates how
business model innovation of its traditional business model in the commercial
aircraft business at home was a key in turning the performance of an existing and
relatively unknown player in the industry into global leadership. Embraer
performed business model innovation by reconfiguring its existent activities in the
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activity system and by changing the content, structure and governance of its
traditional business model: change of relations with suppliers into risk-‐sharing
partnerships, co-‐design of components by suppliers and Embraer together very
early on in the development process, outsourcing of ancillary design and
production activities to local companies, focus on US customers as lead customers
instead of local customers in Brazil, and outsourcing of some major design and
production activities to suppliers outside of Brazil (Santos, Spector, & Van der
Heyden, 2009).
In its business model innovation, Embraer focused from the beginning on
the needs and trends of lead customers in developed markets and orchestrated
accordingly all its activities as a consortium of strategic suppliers from different
countries with the objective to assemble, sell, and service its commercial aircrafts
in developed markets. The key elements of Embraer’s business model, since it was
a protected state-‐owned company, which the firm managed to leverage to
developed markets were its capability to design planes, produce fuselage and
assemble the final product, relying on the delivery of foreign suppliers, and a
strong focus on customers’ needs and their market environments, and all of this at
very competitive prices (Casanova, 2009).
Cemex, the Mexican cement production giant and major global player,
expands by integrating the reconfigured activity system into its traditional
business model to take better advantage of the newly acquired capabilities and
knowledge and increase efficiency. Its internationalization into developed markets
by leveraging its traditional business model began with the acquisition of two
Spanish cement producers in 1992, which had an investment grade sovereign
rating and thus allowed Cemex to improve its credit rating, raise capital in
international financial markets to fuel further acquisitions, consolidate its group-‐
wide debts into the Spanish subsidiaries where interest rates were tax-‐deductible
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in Spain, and it opened a back door through which Cemex could export cement to
the US without having to pay heavy duties (Casanova, 2009). This set the stage for
the firm’s fast internationalization to other developed markets. Cemex’s has
developed a business model, which allows the firm to externally reconfigure its
activities and resources in the activity system by integrating its acquisitions into
the business model quickly and efficiently in order to further leverage its business
model in other developed markets. Although the firm changes the content,
structure, and governance of its business model with every new acquisition and
incorporation, it expands internationally with its one traditional business model.
4.3.4 Developing new business model in emerging markets
EMNEs expand to emerging and developing markets similar in institutional
and environmental conditions to explore new ownership advantages by
developing new business models (Figure 4.4, cell 3) when the fit between the
EMNEs’ traditional business model and the new external environment is initially
not strong enough. Benefits of exploration of new ownership advantages are
distant in time and are highly unpredictable, however, the corresponding
uncertainty is willingly accepted and long-‐term performance improvement takes
priority. This implies that the internationalization strategy of developing a new
business model in emerging and developing markets bears a tradeoff between an
efficiency-‐centered business model design, which aims at lowering organizational
risk, and a novelty-‐centered business model design, which aims at creating an
advantage for the firm.
External reconfiguration of activities with the aim to optimize the external
and internal fit in emerging markets is challenging when the institutional
infrastructure is weak and acquisitions cause valuation difficulties and
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opportunistic behavior by contracting parties, which reduces EMNEs’ ability to buy
and sell (Capron et al., 1998; Chakrabarti et al., 2011), driven by information
asymmetry (Arikan, 2005; Madhok, 2010; Reuer & Ragozzino, 2008) and weak
patent and other appropriability standards (Chi, 1994; Grossman & Hart, 1986;
Rumelt, 1987; Williamson, 1985). Therefore, due to the difficulties in acquisitions
in challenging institutional environments of emerging markets, EMNEs employ a
stepwise approach to their internationalization strategy by initially implementing a
novelty-‐centered business model design that predominantly changes the structure
and the governance elements of their traditional business model. During the first
phase, EMNEs manage dual business models, namely the new and the traditional
one at home. In the second phase, the two business models merge and the
efficiency-‐driven design becomes dominant.
In the first phase, EMNEs innovate their own traditional business models in
order to adapt to the prevailing voids in the new markets. However, they do not
change the content element of their business model as a first step, but put more
emphasis on a strong customer-‐centered perspective on value creation (Priem,
2007). Implementing new activities into the traditional business model, either
developed and acquired, does not necessarily affect the content element of the
business model, but it calls for the development of new organizational processes
and structures (Kindström, 2010; Kindström, Kowalkowski, & Sandberg, 2013;
Neely, 2008), thereby changing the business model element of structure, as very
often new network partners need to be integrated and deep customer-‐specific
knowledge needs to be acquired (Hakanen, Kansola, & Valkokari, 2014).
Moreover, EMNEs often change the structure element as outside-‐in processes
such as market sensing or channel bonding (Day, 1994) to complement their
traditional business model based on a closed-‐system perspective (Grönroos &
Ojasalo, 2014). They further change the governance mechanisms as collaborative,
relational exchange replaces rather automated transactions (Day, 2000).
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Integrating network partners implies new ways to monitor and control network
relations (Matthyssens & Vandenbempt, 2008).
However, EMNEs innovate their business models without destroying the
elements of the activity system that give them a competitive advantage over
competitors. They identify value propositions, which they not modify, whatever
the context (Govindarajan & Ramamurti, 2011) and they deploy their cost
advantages in creative ways to deliver high technology, variety and customization
at minimal price premiums, and redirect niche offerings towards volume segments
(Williamson, 2010). While maintaining their value proposition from the traditional
business model at home, due to the changes of the activity system EMNEs change
the value delivery and as a consequence they change their value capture as they
adapt to the new market. The innovation of the traditional business model
depends on the customers and institutional conditions in the market, the product/
service the EMNE desires to offer in the new market, or the target business it has
acquired in order to enter into the new market. Once EMNEs explored and created
new ownership advantages in the new market, they merge both business models
into one and continue with a single business model strategy. Thus, our discussion
leads to the following propositions:
Proposition 3a: Internationalization through the development of new
business model to developed markets is negatively related to risk
reduction and positively to firm-‐performance, thereby increasing
organizational novelty followed by organizational efficiency.
Proposition 3b: EMNEs following an internationalization strategy of
developing new business model in emerging and developing markets
employ a stepwise approach by predominantly changing the structure
and governance element of their business model to create a novelty-‐
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centered design, and in the second phase they merge both business
models and follow an efficiency-‐centered design.
We illustrate the internationalization strategy of developing new business
model in emerging and developing markets by drawing on examples of two case
studies of EMNEs, namely (1) Enka Holding, Turkey’s biggest construction
company, and (2) Brazil’s Natura Cosméticos (Figure 4.5, cell 3). Table 4.4 presents
details of the two case study illustrations. Enka Holding develops new business
models in other emerging markets where it is easier for the firm to win contracts.
While maintaining its value proposition it offers in the home market, the firm
enters emerging and developing markets with the development of new business
models designed for the specific markets by opening subsidiaries and
reconfiguring its activities and resources to transform its business model to fit the
new institutional environments. Enka Holding develops relationships with key
stakeholders in the new ecosystems and enters diverse joint venture and alliance
agreements with local players. These reconfigurations change the structure and
governance of its traditional business model and lead to changes in the value
delivery and capture. For example, through Mosenka, Enka’s Russian arm, Enka
has become the biggest private real-‐estate owner in Moscow, and one of the city’s
leading developers (Munir, 2002).
Natura Cosméticos from Brazil follows a direct sales business model in the
domestic market. This EMNE enters other emerging markets by transforming its
traditional direct sales business model into a new retail based business model
following a dual business model strategy when it cannot leverage its direct sales
model. For instance, when entering Chile Natura Cosméticos was forced to change
its direct sales model of beauty consultants and develop a retail sales business
model because customers in Chile customers purchase their cosmetics and
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hygiene products in retail stores and not through consultants at the door, which is
also the case in other markets (Eccles, Serafeim, & Heffernan, 2011). Such
innovation of the business model resulted in the internal reconfiguration of the
firm’s activities of distribution, sales, and marketing.
This implies a change to the business model in terms of changes of the
structure and governance elements. While Natura Cosméticos maintained its value
proposition of healthy natural cosmetic products, it changed its value delivery
process and consequently its value capture mechanism. As a consequence, the
company followed a dual business model strategy. While it maintained its
traditional direct sales model at home, Natura Cosméticos used the new business
model in other markets that favor the retail business model. Thus, the company
incorporated the new business model into its traditional business model in order
to achieve higher efficiency during its internationalization.
4.3.5 Developing new business model in developed markets
EMNEs face constraints when pursuing internal reorganization of activities
due to lack of strategic resources and well-‐developed supporting resources, such
as availability of complementary resources (Mitchell, 1989) and skilled personnel
(Penrose, 1959), which are scarce in emerging markets (Peng & Heath, 1996;
Puffer, 1992; Sharma, 1993). In their attempt to overcome those constraints
EMNEs expand to developed markets by pursuing the internationalization strategy
of development of new business models (Figure 4.4, cell 4) with the objective to
get access to complementary and strategic resources, and reconfigure, upgrade
and develop new capabilities to produce advanced value-‐added products and
services required in globally competitive product markets (Aulakh, 2007; Bonaglia
et al., 2007; Chittoor et al. 2009; Duysters et al., 2009; Madhok, 2010; Mathews,
161 | Page
2006). EMNEs pursuing this strategy deal with environmental constraints by
creating novelty rather than imitating existing business models. They view
constraints as stimuli and creative challenges rather than as obstacles that require
taken-‐for-‐granted responses (Amit & Zott, 2012, 2015).
Sanchez and Ricart (2010) note that constraints not only hinder but also help
novelty-‐centered business model design. The essence of novelty-‐centered
business model design is the adoption of new activities, new ways of linking
activities, and/or new ways of governing activities (Amit & Zott, 2014; Zott & Amit,
2010). The strong institutional infrastructure and market development present in
developed markets facilitate and encourage a higher degree external
reconfiguration of activities in EMNEs’ business models (Khanna & Palepu, 1999).
Here, EMNEs pursue the strategy of dual business model management and
internationalize with two separate business models, the traditional business
model in the home market and a new, independent business model developed or
acquired in the developed market. The strategy is based on pure exploration, with
the aim to create advantages for the focal firm and the improvement of long-‐term
firm performance.
Dual business model strategy is pursued when organizational efficiency is
not the main driver but instead the motivation to explore and seek new
opportunities (Kim & Min, 2015). Since EMNEs do not have superior advantages to
be transferred to the acquired firm as typically argued in literature (Nachum,
2003), EMNEs’ greater concern is how to overcome their liability of emergingness
and to learn and upgrade firm capabilities (Madhok, 2010). Furthermore,
integration of the acquired target’s business model into their own activity systems
is also less desirable since EMNEs are motivated by the learning opportunities and
access to strategic resources rather than costs and efficiency unlike multinationals
from developed markets. A recent study found that more than 50 per cent of
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Asian EMNEs do not integrate to any extent since their priorities and motives are
quite distinct than acquirers from developed economies (Cogman & Tan, 2010).
EMNE’s aspired learning has less to do with technology alone but with
management, organizational know-‐how, and aspects concerning the institutional
environment in developed markets. Our discussion leads us to the following
proposition:
Proposition 4: Internationalization through leveraging of the
traditional business model to emerging and developing markets is
negatively related to risk reduction and positively to firm-‐
performance, thereby increasing organizational novelty.
Tata Motors, India’s largest carmaker, and Chinese Lenovo in the computer
industry offer clear illustrations of the dual business model strategy in developed
markets (Figure 4.5, cell 4). Table 4.4 presents details of the two case study
illustrations. In 2007, Tata Motors acquired Jaguar and Land Rover, two luxury car
brands with their major markets being USA and European countries. At the same
time, Tata Motors could not really be termed a global brand with majority of its
revenues coming from India. The development of the new business model through
the acquisition transformed Tata Motors into a global player and gave the
company access to technology expertise, offered access to new markets, and
allowed the firm global brand control. Chinese Lenovo also followed a dual
business model strategy when the company acquired IBM’s PC division and
became overnight an international company. Instead of incorporating IBM’s PC
division’s business model into its own activity system Lenovo employed two
separate business models, its traditional activity system in China and the acquired
business model in the US (Vives & Lessard, 2006). The acquired business models
both by Tata Motors and Lenovo were very different from the EMNEs’ traditional
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business models at home. They implied new content, strategy, and governance of
the business models, offered new value propositions to customers, new value
delivery and value appropriation mechanisms. These EMNEs develop a value
creation logic that breaks the “existing rules of the game” (Matthyssens &
Vandenbembt, 2008, p. 326).
Developing new business models in developed markets is the approach
followed by India’s Tata Group spanning a wide range of industries, from hotels,
tea, chemicals and metals to consulting, auto components, and automobiles. Tata
Group’s different companies expand to developed markets by acquisition of
leading firms in their industries. Based on the nature of the business, these
investments in Western markets have different strategic objectives: accessing new
markets (BPO, steel, cars, trucks); integrating value chain (steel); brand control
(tea, cars); and technology acquisition (steel, cars, trucks) (Goldstein, 2008). Tata
externally reconfigures its activity systems by acquiring strategic resources such as
managerial, technological, and marketing resources without having to develop
them internally. EMNEs develop new business models in Western markets through
acquisitions, however, because of the group’s interest in learning from the
acquired companies and overcoming its liability of emergingness (Madhok, 2010)
the group does not integrate its acquisitions into its business models, maintains
operations in diverse locations, and manages dual business models.
4.4 Discussion
Recent wave of internationalization sparked new interest in firms from
emerging markets making it an important research topic in international business
(Buckley, 2002). The article argues that EMNEs follow different
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internationalization strategies to emerging and developed markets depending on
the degree of institutional difference and endowments of own resources and
activities. As we have argued throughout this article, all internationalization
trajectories of EMNEs aim to create and secure the long-‐term viability and
performance, as well as reduce risk, of the firm’s business. Thus, the central
mission of business model management strategies is to design, structure and
govern activities (internal and external to the firm) in such a way as to realize
(exploit or explore) opportunities that enhance the viability and performance of
the firm, as well as reduce risk. The outcomes of such business model
management strategies during the different internationalization trajectories are
far from predicable. Therefore, in Figure 4.4 we present four different but realistic
strategies of such potential business model management outcomes and illustrate
them with eight case studies in Figure 4.5.
We argue that during internationalization by firms from emerging markets,
under certain circumstances, the dual business model strategy is preferable to the
single business model strategy, but under certain other circumstances, the single
business model strategy might be preferable to dual business model management.
Specifically, we argue that the dual business model strategy is the preferred
strategy when EMNEs enter emerging and developed markets by developing or
acquiring new business models and the new market is not only strategically
different from the EMNEs domestic market but also when the two business
models face serious tradeoffs and conflicts. While the firm explores new
ownership advantages it is crucial to exploit the newly developed and acquired
advantages and strategic resources such as for example brand equity, financial
resources, and managerial and competitive expertise. Entry into emerging and
developed markets via a single business model strategy by leveraging the
traditional business model is the better option in terms of efficiency gains when
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the new market is very similar to the domestic market in terms of institutional and
economic conditions and presents few conflicts that need managing.
Figure 4.5: Internationalization strategies: Case study illustrations
Source: Own creation.
In such a case, embracing the new business model through the EMNE’s
existing activity system is the superior internationalization strategy. Here the firm
needs to strive to protect the business model and exploit its advantages and
synergies. We have also described the circumstances when EMNEs need to
innovate the business model at first before entering a developed market by
leveraging their business model and integrating it with the existing activity system
in order to follow a single business model strategy in developed markets. In similar
terms, when EMNEs enter emerging markets by developing new business models
the preferred strategy is to first innovate the traditional business model in the new
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markets and manage two separate business models at first before eventually
integrating them with the existing activity system. We have therefore proposed
that the best way to approach the topic of internationalization by firms from
emerging markets is through a contingency perspective.
EMNEs expanding across borders need to understand their business models
and their choice of business model design and management, as well as how their
activities are organized in the activity systems, as the business model allows them
to make more informed choices about their internationalization strategies. The
business model acts as the core logic of how a firm conducts business, how it
delivers value to stakeholders, and how it links factor and product markets in
domestic and foreign markets. The architecture of the EMNE’s business model –
the choice of activities, how the activities are organized, and who performs them
(Svejenova et al., 2010; Zott & Amit, 2010) – captures how the EMNEs are
embedded in its ecosystem of multiple networks of suppliers, partners, customers,
and competitors in the domestic market as well as in the foreign target market
(Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010). The business model describes how the
activities of the EMNEs are linked, e.g. the sequencing between them, and it
captures their importance for the business model in terms of their core,
supporting or peripheral nature (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002; Zott & Amit, 2010), which,
in turn, helps determining the internationalization strategy in terms of exploitation
of the traditional business model or rather the development of a new business
model. Thus, by shifting the focus away from country and firm specific advantages
that EMNEs experience or have a lack of toward the business model as a
boundary-‐spanning concept opens new areas for theorizing on internationalization
strategies for firms from emerging markets.
Our definition of the business model as a boundary-‐spanning activity system
(Zott & Amit, 2010) that acts as a representation of firms’ underlying strategic
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choices (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010) and our delineation of its
mechanisms for sparking different internationalization strategies for EMNEs
suggest a shift in perspective in research. The locus of internationalization activity
of EMNEs is not solely the existence or creation of ownership advantages, but lies
in the interplay between the business model design and the reconfiguration of
activities in the activity system. Those EMNEs that intent on internationalization,
therefore, need to understand the design of their business models and their
management requirements.
Our approach shifts focus from the ongoing debate of exploitation versus
exploration, to considering their interaction. As we have noted, opportunity
realization during internationalization requires cognizance and recognition of the
dynamic interplay between leveraging of the traditional business model and
innovation and development of new business model. As such, the business model
approach to EMNEs’ expansion across borders also causes a shift in the conception
of opportunity realization itself during the different internationalization
trajectories. Hence, the business model offers a means to revisit existing views on
the nature of internationalization opportunities and trajectories. The business
model offers an important means of defining opportunities, calling for firm
boundary-‐spanning intelligence rather than focal-‐firm centered insight or
foresight.
4.4.1 Theoretical implications
The findings presented in this paper have important implications for theory.
In contrast to the extant theorizing on the internationalization strategies likely to
be adopted by emerging markets firms (Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008; Dawar &
Frost, 1999; Khanna & Palepu, 2006; Madhok, 2010), the findings indicate that
168 | Page
firms from emerging markets do not necessarily follow an either exploitation or
exploration strategy. In this sense, this study supports the research by Chittoor
and Ray (2007) arguing that EMNEs internationalize through a combination of
exploitation and exploration strategies determined by their business model
design, innovation and management. Our theoretical implications, taken together,
support theoretical conjectures in the literature that EMNEs use
internationalization as a springboard to acquire strategic assets from diverse
markets in order to overcome their many disadvantages and become more
competitive during periods of institutional transitions (Hutzschenreuter, Pedersen,
& Volberda, 2007; Luo & Tung, 2007; Mathews, 2006), but they also support the
traditional theoretical conjectures in literature that EMNEs internationalize
through the exploitation of their ownership advantages (Ramamurti, 2009a) by
leveraging and innovating their own traditional business models. Our findings
suggest that internationalization through business model management, with the
underlying activity reconfigurations, facilitate strategic and organizational
innovation of these firms.
The resulting explanations help us better understand how business models
interact with the external environment during EMNEs’ internationalization and
how these firms overcome their home market challenges and advantage deficits
by reconfiguring their activity systems. International markets serve as means to
gain access to diverse, locally embedded ideas and knowledge-‐based capabilities
(Almeida, 1996; Doz, Santos, & Williamson, 2001). The institutional environment
of countries is determined by the sets of rules and regulations that direct the
economies (North, 1990). Thus, every institutional environment offers different
advantages, opportunities and challenges. Over time, organizations learn to
operate in particular institutional environments (Eriksson et al., 1997; Johanson &
Vahlne, 1977) and manage their relationships with their external environment
(Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008).
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Majority of studies in the management literature study the influence of host
country institutions on the entry of foreign multinationals from developed
markets (Bevan, Estrin, & Meyer, 2004; Henisz, 2000). New streams of literature
discuss how home country institutions influence the market entry of
multinationals from emerging economies and their competitive behavior in foreign
markets (Cuervo-‐Cazurra, 2011; Cuervo-‐Cazurra & Genc, 2008; Rangan &
Drumond, 2011). This study contributes to the literature by adding a new
dimension, namely the internal notion of the business model. By reconfiguring
their activity systems internally and externally EMNEs use the internal driving
force of their business models to overcome home and host country influence. This
conceptual article contributes to the present theory on internationalization of
EMNEs by adding new strategic alternatives EMNEs can pursue in addition to the
pure exploitation in other emerging markets and exploration in developed
markets perspectives.
Another theoretical implication of the evidence presented in this article is
that EMNEs are a unique kind of multinationals that can only be understood
adequately with de novo theory as suggested by Mathews (2002). Existing
international business theory is adequate and sufficient to help answer questions
regarding why EMNEs internationalize, what challenges they face in host
countries, and when they prefer hierarchies over markets (Ramamurti, 2009a).
However, it falls short in answering questions about competitive advantages of
EMNEs and where those advantages derive from, why some EMNEs follow
substantial outward foreign direct investment strategies, and why some EMNEs
compete successfully against established Western multinationals. By introducing
the notion of the business model, the proposed conceptual framework helps
advance answers to issues in EMNEs research for which existent international
business theory falls short in providing.
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4.4.2 Managerial implications
This article also provides practical and managerial implications. It is
important for managers to understand how firms from emerging markets enter
into new foreign markets and what are the implications of different business
model management strategies and the underlying objectives. The presented
conceptual framework allows managers to better understand how to expand to
new markets in terms of leveraging the traditional business model, innovate the
business model, or enter new markets through the development or acquisition of
an entirely new business model. Each business model management strategy bears
different consequences for the firm and requires different organization of the
activity system, which in turn has implication for the value creation and value
capture mechanisms.
Our discussion underscores that managers’ vision, commitment to action,
ability to articulate when and where to focus search for opportunities
internationally, and social skills are needed to build momentum for
internationalization of EMNEs. Managing the different internationalization and
business model management strategies requires different leaderships skills that
allow opportunity exploration that fosters exploitation. The greatest contribution
of the business model concept is stretching the EMNEs managers’ thinking and
frames to consider “far-‐off” scenarios that are initially hard to justify or even to
comprehend. The business model concept requires managers to stretch beyond
their familiar “search zone,” (March & Simon, 1958) to explore distant signals of
pending change (Zahra, 2008).
Our proposed framework allows managers to believe that their firms are not
necessarily at a disadvantage relative to their competitors from developed
markets, but that they also can develop greater advantage vis-‐à-‐vis Western rivals.
The presented conceptual framework encourages managers to evaluate the
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internationalization of EMNEs from the business model perspective in terms of
how EMNEs create and capture value, despite the existence or non-‐existence of
ownership advantages. The notion of the business model allows EMNEs’ managers
to focus on the core logic of how to operate and reconfigure their activity systems
internally or externally depending on the context of emerging and developed
markets. Leveraging of the traditional business model from home and the
development of new business models have different competitive consequences
because they require quite different organizational and individual capabilities and
follow different strategies; that is, EMNEs require different abilities to absorb,
integrate, and transform internal and external resources and activities into a
competitive advantage (Amit & Schoemaker, 1993).
4.4.3 Avenues for future research
Having outlined our article’s contributions, we believe it has several
limitations that provide opportunities for further research. First, as it is a
theoretical article, the validity of our ideas needs to be empirically tested. Large
sample studies may be attempted to formulate and test specific hypotheses with
regard to the business model as a specific firm-‐level factor that enables the
internationalization of EMNEs. The next logical step is also to analyze whether the
distinct internationalization trajectories and business model management
strategies are associated with any performance differentials. Thus, future research
should systematically analyze and test which of the four identified
internationalization and business model management strategies create more
value for the EMNEs and allow for increased value appropriation and under what
circumstances and conditions, and what are the drivers of differential firm
performance. Secondly, additional research on the nature of EMNEs’
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internationalization trajectories would be useful; that is, distilling the drivers,
enablers and impediments of the business model innovation process during
internationalization seems very relevant from this perspective. Thirdly, future
research would greatly benefit from a deeper analysis of the capabilities needed in
each of the four business model management strategies.
4.5 Conclusion
This article attempts to throw light on the internationalization trajectories of
emerging markets firms by proposing a conceptual framework. Specifically, we
study the internationalization trajectories of EMNEs with focus on how these firms
manage their business models during their international expansion via a single or
dual business model management strategy. Overall, the paper highlights the
importance of studying emerging markets firms to reveal new theoretical insights.
The study of the diversification of EMNEs has already resulted in new insights into
diversification. The study of EMNEs will also generate new insights on
internationalization, but requires further work (Wells, 1998). The current paper is
a step in this direction.
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Chapter 5: Discussion, Contributions, Implications,
Limitations and Future Research
This dissertation has attempted to explore and define theoretically and
empirically the concept of business model transformation and its underlying
dynamics by distilling its enablers of business model innovation and business
model internationalization across multiple contexts to ensure the robustness of
my conceptualizations. This allows the examination of the different research
questions discussed in the preceding chapters. In this chapter, I discuss and reflect
on how this dissertation realizes its original intent and show how the collective
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contributions could provide a distinct research agenda for future research. Final
remarks complete this thesis.
5.1 Discussion: Conceptual Framework of Business
Model Transformation
As a whole, these three essays follow a common thread of business model
transformation and its underlying dynamics and provide empirical findings and
integrative insights that move the business model research agenda forward. The
shared phenomenon of all three essays is business model transformation that
leads to strategic renewal of the firm. While Essay 1 has the objective to shed light
on the ambiguity in current research on business models and provides an
overview of the business model conceptualizations, the terminology and general
relationships between elements that influence its evolution, Essay 2 and Essay 3
build on this by diving deeper into the role of the distribution and characteristics
of interdependency between business model elements that leads to business
model transformation through the lenses of innovation and internationalization of
business models.
Taken together, business model transformation is a multi-‐dimensional
construct, which resides in a firm’s strategic choices. However, the transformation
design is not purely given by nature but to some extent at the discretion of the
firm. This thesis suggests that business model transformation is to some extent a
choice by itself, driven by antecedents of business model innovation and through
growth strategies of the business model that both determine the opportunity
space that allows the business model to create and capture value. Antecedents of
business model innovation and business model growth strategies determine
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whether and how the set of activities of the business model is supposed to
interact or not. By taking decisions that influence the contingency and
interdependency design of the business model, firms set the right context for
system-‐induced recombination of activities as a source of business model
transformation.
Complementarities in business models can lead to inertia faced by
environmental changes and, at the same time, incremental changes in the activity
system of the business model can have detrimental consequences for the business
model itself and the focal firm because of tight interdependency of the activities
and choices made in the design of the business model (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a).
Thus, by adapting to evolving ecosystems, firms transform their traditional activity
systems in order to create novel business models. These insights, derived through
my research on both complex service providers in Germany as well as emerging
market multinationals expanding across borders, support recent work on
institutional theory that highlights institutional entrepreneurship and describes
how institutional entrepreneurs construct new markets, become dominant players
in those markets, and simultaneously legitimize business model transformation by
attracting new stakeholders of the ecosystem (Battilana, Leca, & Boxenbaum,
2009; Hwang & Powell, 2006; Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005).
Evolving ecosystems act as stimuli and creative challenges that enable focal
firms to deal with them by creating novelty through business model
transformation rather than imitating and following existing business models (Amit
& Zott, 2015), which is understood as an incremental process of exploring new
activity configurations. Business model transformation not only allows strategic
renewal but it goes beyond that by defining an opportunity space in which the
business model is being passed through on the way to collaborative agency.
Consequently, I argue that business model transformation enables firms to
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continuously enact upon and realize opportunities in the determined opportunity
space of value creation and appropriation during the evolution of the ecosystem. I
further claim that interplay takes place between the evolution of the ecosystem
and business model transformation of firms within the ecosystem.
The novelty of a new business model opens up new strategic directions and
transforms the ecosystem. Thus, firms become adept at experimenting with a
repertoire of strategic alternatives that my spur game changing strategies (Huber,
1991; Miller & Chen, 1996) toward other stakeholders in the ecosystem and may
transform the ecosystem itself. Such business model transformation that
orientates itself on the evolution of the ecosystem refers to a focal firm’s way to
improve the odds and out-‐smart other players in pursuit of profit and growth
(Lafley & Charan, 2008). Business model transformation involves the creation of a
new game by envisioning and realizing a new playing field and related system of
roles, rules, relationships, and outcomes. This, however, requires mobilization of
collective action across a range of stakeholders, within and outside the ecosystem,
as well as lobbying efforts at the institutional level to legitimize the new game
(Aldrich & Fiol, 1994; Porter & Lee, 2013; Porter & Teisberg, 2006). Environmental
constraints not only hinder but also help novelty-‐centered business model design
(Sanchez & Ricart, 2010). The essence of novelty-‐centered business model design
is the adoption of new activities, new ways of linking activities, and/or new ways
of governing activities (Amit & Zott, 2014; Zott & Amit, 2010).
Advancing on my preceding research in this dissertation, I provide a more
systemic perspective on business model transformation that emphasizes the
interdependencies and complementarities between a firm and its stakeholders
within the ecosystem in order to better understand how value is created and
captured. In my focus on business model transformation and its underlying
dynamics enabled through business model innovation and growth of the business
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model through internationalization, I emphasize firms’ orchestration of internal
and external activities to enact and realize opportunities, whether they are
discovered or created, to increase the potential for value creation and
appropriation in order to adapt to the evolving ecosystem.
This dissertation defines business model transformation as a mean to allow
the focal firm to attain scale, raise the threshold of viability, as well as find new
market space by enacting its opportunity space through value creation and value
capture with the goal to adapt to an evolving ecosystem. I propose a conceptual
framework of business model transformation by integrating the results and
contributions of my preceding research. Placed in an agentic world, this proposed
integrative framework considers the business model as a complement to strategy,
characterized by constraints that determine its opportunity space and allow for
realization of the opportunities and thus enable value creation and value capture.
The constraints are depicted by the business model innovation antecedents on the
firm-‐level as they drive business model innovation, which in turn enables
transformation as a response to the need for adaptation to an evolving ecosystem.
The antecedents dictate the opportunity space as they influence every firm
and its respective activity system in different ways. Also, firms respond differently
to antecedents of innovation, depending on the interdependency of the activities
in their business models. Growth strategies defined by internationalization
trajectories of business models further determine constraints of the opportunity
space by enabling the firm to transform its activity system through growth, which
requires adjustments, changes or new developments of activities and the
underlying interdependencies. Transformation of the business model allows firms
to attain scale and raise the threshold of viability, as well as find new market
space. Business model innovation and growth through internationalization are the
enablers of business model transformation by allowing the firm to make strategic
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choices in order to enact the opportunity space. Figure 5.1 below illustrates the
proposed conceptual framework of business model transformation.
Figure 5.1: Conceptual framework of business model transformation
Source: Own creation
The agentic representation of business model transformation considers time
and experience as important prerequisites for the conceptualization and conceives
the business model as a dynamic concept determined by the notion of continuity.
It defines the dimensions that characterize the way firms realize opportunities in
order to increase their value creation and appropriation potential. Here, the
business model acts as a design of organizational structures to enact business
opportunities and transform them into a distinct value propositions (George &
Bock, 2011; Svejenova, Planellas, & Vives, 2010; Teece, 2010), thereby transcend
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the organization, span its boundaries (Zott & Amit, 2010) and transpire in a
network structure. I propose viewing business model transformation by defining
some of the factors that condition this process as well as some of the outputs that
it might produce.
This framework emphasizes the ongoing and changing nature of business
model transformation and its underlying dynamics. In this model, I not only
consider the dynamics of the interaction between the different dimensions of the
model but also its variation and retention over time. Elaborating on work by Porter
(1980, 1981, 1991), Spender (1989, 2011), and Spender and Kraaijenbrink (2010),
the proposed framework provides a representation of the evolutionary nature of
business model transformation, an intrinsic part of strategic management. It
considers business model transformation a collective, continuously changing
process in which the different dimensions interplay and confront each other in a
complex process of evolution.
5.2 Collective Conclusions and Contributions
The discussion throughout the thesis implies that a fundamental question in
literature is how firms continuously rejuvenate themselves to meet the demands
of an ever-‐changing business environment. Miles and his colleagues recognized
the challenge of strategic renewal as the crux of entrepreneurship and called it the
entrepreneurial problem (Miles, Snow, Meyer, & Coleman, 1978). In a similar vein,
the behavioral theory of the firm highlighted the role of organizations’ myopic
search (March & Simon, 1958) while Penrose (1959) stressed the role of limited
managerial capacity in handling organizations’ obsolescence and stifling growth.
Winter (1993), in turn, highlighted the need for building and revamping
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organizational capabilities to address these diverse challenges. In similar line of
thought, Teece and his colleagues (Teece, Pisano, & Shuen, 1997) focused on the
role of dynamic capabilities in the creation and appropriation of value. This
dissertation aims at extending the discussion and research on strategic renewal by
introducing and defining the concept of business model transformation through
which incumbents and new ventures alike increase their value creation and
capture potential by realizing and enacting opportunities.
The overall general question this thesis aims to answer is: What is the nature
of business model transformation in evolving business ecosystems? This thesis
seeks to provide a fine-‐grained understanding of business model transformation
as the notion of fit adjustment in evolving business ecosystems and unravel the
underlying dynamics of business model transformation of firms as they innovate
and internationalize to realize – exploit and explore – opportunities. In this
dissertation, I define business model transformation as a mean to allow the focal
firm to attain scale, raise the threshold of viability, as well as find new market
space by realizing its opportunity space and increase its value creation and value
capture potential with the goal to adapt to an evolving ecosystem, enabled by
business model innovation and business model internationalization. Realization of
business opportunities is defined here as a firm’s exploitation and exploration of
internal and external activities and resources within the business model to
continuously pursue value creation and value capture. Studying business model
transformation through the notion of business model dynamics allows the
examination of strategy at the intersection to innovation and internationalization.
Advancing this discussion, research on business models is a growing and
influential literature stream. As discussed throughout this thesis, business models
have been recognized as complementary to strategy as they reflect the realized
strategy (Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010) thereby allowing firms to be
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competitive (Zott & Amit, 2008), and they are considered as an important locus of
strategic innovation (Anderson & Markides, 2007; Markides, 1997, 2008) thereby
propelling growth and progress with an impact on firm performance (Malone et
al., 2006; Zott & Amit, 2007) of new ventures and incumbents alike (Fiet & Patel,
2008; Magretta, 2002; Markides, 2008). With its narratives and numbers
(Magretta, 2002), the business model reflects the core logic of firm’s value
creation and value capture (Amit & Zott, 2001; Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002)
and reveals the focal firm’s aspirations and intentions of strategic renewal
(Volberda et al., 2001).
This dissertation examines business model transformation through the
enabler of business model innovation in the context of complex service providers
in terms of dental service providers in Germany and through the enabler of
business model internationalization in the context of emerging economies and the
expansion of their firms across borders to emerging and developed markets. To
ensure the robustness of my conceptualization, I explore the notion of business
model transformation across multiple contexts for three main reasons. First,
scholars have highlighted the merits of context specific theorizing that considers
the variables that form the setting’s characteristics and fuels its actors’ behavior
(Zahra, 2008). Second, opportunity is a context specific phenomenon, which
requires clarifying its context of operation to gain rich understanding from its
investigation. Third, the contexts of both complex dental service providers in
Germany and emerging market multinationals represent unique settings to
observe the notion of business model transformation and its underlying dynamics
of innovation and internationalization respectively.
The uniqueness of the context of dental service providers in Germany
emerges from the institutional change from small personal dental practices to
large anonymous dental centers, indicating an evolution and significant change in
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the ecosystem of dental service providers. Moreover, the dental profession by
nature is defined as very service intensive. Very little research exists that describes
the complexity of the dental industry and the relationship between the
stakeholders and the dental professional. Researchers describe the dental
profession as a monopolistic profession as its market behavior reflects a simple
monopolistic model because the dental service providers act in their own interests
instead of those of their consumers (Kushman & Scheffler, 1978; Kushman,
Scheffler, Miners, & Mullers, 1978).
The uniqueness of the context of emerging market multinationals emerges
from the environmental complexity, the uncertainty of industrial structure, the
specificity of business culture and the economic and political shocks, which are
distinctive characteristics of emerging economies (Hoskisson, Eden, Lau, & Wright,
2000; Luo, 2002). Bringing these traits to the opportunity realization through
exploitation and exploration of ownership advantages and the management and
innovation of business models during the internationalization trajectories links
national level environmental factors to the notion of business model and its
underlying dynamics and illustrate how firms transform their business models and
adjust the fit of their activity systems as markets emerge and ecosystems evolve
(London & Hart, 2004), a phenomenon observed in diverse emerging economies
with different cultural and political characteristics. As a result, context invokes the
anomalies embedded in firms’ business model transformation process within the
setting and as they internationalize.
Based on the assumptions and research questions presented in the general
introduction of this dissertation, I now turn to explore some general conclusions
stemming from this research. I began this thesis by presenting the main debates
regarding business models and their dynamic nature. Given the nature of the
overall research question of the dissertation and its subsequent research
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questions, which aim at providing a deeper understanding of the notion of
business model transformation and its underlying dynamics of innovation and
internationalization, the research design is that of grounded theory and multiple
case studies, following a semi-‐constructivist methodological approach. The three
articles’ endeavors together provide theoretical and empirical findings that move
the business model research agenda forward.
First, following a critical review, I identify three different perspectives in
literature that determine the various subsequent conceptualizations of the notion
of business models on different levels of analysis. Second, I develop grounded
theory that sheds light on our understanding of business model innovation
antecedents on the firm-‐level and value innovation as the outcome of business
model innovation of complex service providers. Third, I contribute theoretical and
empirical data on the growth strategies of business models through
internationalization of emerging multinationals. Together, the essays in this thesis
have improved our understanding of how business model and business model
transformation as well as its underlying dynamics enabled through innovation and
internationalization are constructed. I proceed now to present the collective
conclusions and contributions of this thesis:
• Research on business models has developed in isolated fashion
within silos, according to the phenomena of interest to the
respective researchers and their respective viewpoints, in
different contexts, and most of all on different levels of analysis.
• Embracing the three different perspectives in literature offers an
implicit consensus of the business model as a new unit of analysis
that spans traditional levels of analysis and hinders arriving at
conflicting conclusions.
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• Most of the received literature on business models places the
emphasis on value creation and value delivery of the business
model and less on the value capture dimension.
• Specialization is associated with the division of labor and affects
how service providers search for new technologies and what type
of knowledge they acquire.
• Concentration leads to changes of the scale on which activities are
delivered and drives the efficiency-‐based theme of the business
model through cost efficiency, better knowledge sharing, better
communication, collaboration, and efficiency for customers.
• Service providers are not the passive pawns of environmental
constraints but instead take steps to challenge them.
• Business model innovation contributes to the re-‐shaping of the
firm’s activities necessary to realize and address the envisioned
external disruption of the ecosystem.
• By innovating their business models, service providers move away
from a supply-‐driven system toward a customer-‐centered system,
with a focus on customer outcome.
• Emerging multinationals follow different internationalization
strategies to emerging and developed markets depending on the
degree of institutional difference and endowments of own
resources and activities.
• The business model approach to emerging multinationals’
expansion across borders causes a shift in the conception of
opportunity realization itself during the different
internationalization trajectories.
• Interdependency of activities is crucial in understanding the
transformation of the business model.
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• Firms not only encompass radical business model transformation
when groundbreaking developments in the ecosystem force them
to do so, but business model transformation can also be the result
of many small transformation steps that are not triggered by
severe ecosystem changes and environmental constraints.
From the research performed in this thesis, I not only provide the variables
to understand the business model transformation logic in a particular moment in
time but I also reflect on how business model transformation evolves over time
and allows firms to adapt to a changing and evolving ecosystems. I also provide
some insights to understand the factors that influence and the outputs derived
from business model transformation. The above described theorizing throughout
the thesis considers the business model phenomenon as an intrinsic part of the
organization and allows us to better understand strategic renewal, growth,
differential firm performance and sources of competitive advantage. So far, I have
examined the main dimensions framing business model transformation. In the
next section I propose a joint framework that integrates the lenses of business
model innovation and business model internationalization.
5.3 Collective Implications
5.3.1 Theoretical implications
This dissertation contributes to new research at the intersection of business
models and ecosystem by exploring how firms adapt their business models to
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evolving ecosystems through business model transformation. It explores the
nature of business model transformation as a response to evolving business
ecosystems by analyzing the underlying dynamics of business model innovation
and growth through internationalization. This dissertation defines business model
transformation as a mean to allow the focal firm to attain scale, raise the
threshold of viability, as well as find new market space by enacting its opportunity
space through value creation and value capture with the goal to adapt to an
evolving ecosystem. I propose a conceptual framework of business model
transformation by integrating the results and contributions of my preceding
research across various contexts. This dissertation has improved our
understanding of how business model transformation is constructed at the
intersection of strategic management and the theory of the firm, by
conceptualizing business model transformation and its ability to enable the firm to
realize opportunities in order to increase its value creation and value capture
potential in an agentic world.
I argue that business model transformation is a complex and sometimes
ambiguous process. It is not linear and it can imply prospective and retrospective
processes of change. The findings of the preceding research discussed in chapter 3
and chapter 4, and complemented with the development of the business model
transformation framework discussed in chapter 5, are in line with findings
presented by Khanagha and colleagues (2014). Firms not only encompass radical
business model transformation when groundbreaking developments in the
ecosystem force them to do so, but business model transformation can also be the
result of many small transformation steps that are not triggered by severe
ecosystem changes and environmental constraints. My findings and conclusions
are also in line with research presented by Brea-‐Solís et al. (2015) in that the
emphasis on certain choices affecting the business model makes a difference and
that focus on business model choices that generate growth and lead to
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transformation are of importance for future performance, and also with research
conducted by Kim and Min (2015) with respect to dual business model
management.
The findings and outcomes of this thesis further allow overcome a deficiency
also highlighted by Schneider and Spieth (2013) that most studies on business
model change refer to radical, industry disruptive business model innovation. In
this thesis, I present and discuss that this is not the case. Rather, business model
transformation allows firms to realize opportunities through a step-‐wise process
of change. I further contribute by defining the constraints of business model
transformation that determine its opportunity space for the realization of
opportunities and the subsequent value creation and appropriation. In defining
the opportunity space of business model transformation I identify only the
reasonable possibility of a firm rather than its actualization. Its closure and
enactment is left to management and implies search for heuristics, which admit
and shape managers’ creative capabilities and choices. My argumentation and the
proposed framework take distance from rational decision-‐making and intuit a
place for the manager, making it appealing to practitioners.
This dissertation further contributes to research on business models by
providing more theoretical clarity about business model conceptualization, the
underlying elements and the interplay among them. In particular, I identify three
perspectives on business models prevailing in literature, which reveal sources of
differences but also commonalities and shared dimensions in the various business
model definitions that act as a catalyst toward more convergence in research on
business models. The identification of the three perspectives in literature
demonstrates major methodological implications and establishes a clear position
of the business model in literature. It legitimizes the conceptualization of the
business model as either complementary to strategy or as a model of the firm
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thereby restricting strategy. This methodological classification provides clarity for
future research and helps solve the dilemma in this field by allowing scholars to
place their research on business models accordingly.
By analyzing the underlying dynamics of business model transformation
through the lens of business model innovation, this dissertation contributes to
theorizing on business models by identifying the antecedents of business model
innovation on the firm-‐level, which constitute the opportunity space of business
model transformation. This thesis contributes to institutional theory by extending
the locus of individual insights in innovation research (Beckman, 2006; Hargadon &
Sutton, 1997; Ruef, 2002; Sinhur & Zott, 2014) to the consideration of firm-‐level
transformation constraints. This dissertation further enhances strategy literature
that points to the relevance of value innovation, as the desired outcome to be
achieved through business model innovation, as a competitive trajectory of
business model transformation. This insight constructs the opportunity space for
business model transformation.
By identifying growth of business models through internationalization as the
second lens of the underlying business model dynamics of business model
transformation, this thesis further contributes to literature by proposing a
theoretical framework depicted by the two key variables of institutional difference
and strategic initiatives. In this sense, differences in institutional environments
across countries lead to different strategic initiatives (Chakrabarti, Vidal, &
Mitchell, 2011) and therefore to different choices of distinctive business models
(Casadesus-‐Masanell & Ricart, 2010; Shafer et al., 2005). My findings are of
particular interest as I show that internationalization strategies are not one-‐
dimensional. I argue that the central mission of business model management
during internationalization is to design, structure and govern activities (internal
and external to the firm) in such a way as to realize (exploit or explore)
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opportunities that enhance the viability and performance of the firm, as well as
reduce risk and allow firms to adapt to changing ecosystems. Consequently, the
different internationalization strategies pursued by emerging market firms lead to
different reconfigurations of the business model’s activity system and to different
business model management strategies in order to adapt to changing ecosystems.
Thus, this dissertation provides a more systemic perspective that emphasizes the
interdependencies between a firm and its stakeholders within the ecosystem in
order to better understand how value is created and captured.
As a result, my research focus on business model transformation through
innovation and internationalization lenses and firms’ ecosystems sheds light on
the importance of balancing firms’ internal and external conditions to enable them
to adapt and shape their ecosystems. Therefore, the dissertation points to the
merits of addressing firm-‐level business model transformation through the
underlying dynamics of business model innovation and international growth from
an agentic view for future business model and theory of the firm theoretical
efforts under the umbrella of strategic management. The focus on activities in my
attempt to capture the firm-‐level phenomenon of business model transformation
placed in the agentic world is a counterweight to the business model construct
defined as a static model by the determined view. Although, I do not deny the
usefulness of the model construct of the business model, I posit that it eliminates
the dynamics and ability of the business model to change and evolve over time,
which may need to be complemented by the gauge of firms’ activities and their
interdependencies in the activity system of the business model. This is in spirit
with early classical arguments of entrepreneurship that provide compelling
reasoning that firms are identified through their actions (Covin & Slevin, 1991;
Gartner, 1989; Schumpeter, 1934).
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In this line of thought and with particular focus on the interdependencies
between the business model activities, this dissertation further contributes to our
understanding of fit of the business model, to which firms need to pay special
attention. The external fit between strategy and ecosystem conditions has been
widely discussed in past research (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a; Yamakawa, Yang, & Lin,
2011; Zajac, Kraatz, & Bresser, 2000). As argued throughout the thesis, the
business model, as a complement to strategy, acts as a reflection of the focal
firm’s realized strategy, therefore, as such it needs to match and adjust its fit to its
ecosystem and the underlying conditions. Thus, business models needs to change
and evolve over time as dynamic external fit is crucial (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a;
Zajac et al., 2000). Moreover, my dissertation also uncovers and confirms that the
degree of internal fit among the activities in the business model also plays an
important role, in addition to the external fit. A business model in order to be
successful in its transformation needs to achieve not only the external fit with its
strategy and alignment with the strategy and the ecosystem evolution but it needs
to show a distinct internal fit. Chapters 3 and 4 examine and discuss on
longitudinal data the role of external and internal business model fit related to
changes and evolution in the ecosystem that takes place over time.
When the ecosystem evolves, firms adjust their activity systems and
reconfigure the sets of activities within the business model (Siggelkow & Levinthal,
2003). Internal fit among activities ensures that the business model has a coherent
organizing of activities, while external fit refers to the appropriateness of the
configuration of activities given the ecosystem affecting the business model. Fit
among the activities in the business model is of crucial importance to the firm
since environmental changes in the ecosystem can affect the external and/or the
internal fit (Siggelkow, 2001, 2002a,b, 2011), which in turn will affect the business
model architecture and the resources employed. By adapting to evolving
ecosystems, service providers create novel business models. The focus on focal
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firm’s efforts and undertakings to transform its business model may provide useful
insights into the role of collective harnessing of its members’ individual efforts.
Business model transformation encourages knowledge sharing and
distribution across the firm, which encourages collective sense making at the
organizational level to link this information and funnel it towards novel business
model design and new breakthroughs. A focus on collective intelligence ascribes
firm’s entrepreneurial initiatives to firm wide efforts that transcend specific
individuals’ contributions. These findings support recent work on institutional
theory that highlights institutional entrepreneurship and describes how
institutional entrepreneurs construct new markets, become dominant players in
those markets, and simultaneously legitimize business model innovation by
attracting new stakeholders of the ecosystem (Battilana, Leca, & Boxenbaum,
2009; Hwang & Powell, 2005; Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005). Thus, I argue that
business model transformation enables firms to continuously enact upon
opportunities of value creation and appropriation in their defined opportunity
space during the evolution of the ecosystem.
This thesis contributes to research on business models and business model
transformation by offering fine-‐grained empirical and theoretical analyses of the
evolution of the underlying dynamics of business model innovation and business
model growth through internationalization. It advances a multi-‐level, multi-‐period,
multi-‐disciplinary, and multi-‐context view of business model transformation,
which integrates in a theoretical framework notions and insights from the fields of
strategy (activity systems and fit of choices), organization theory (agentic world
and organizing), innovation (business model innovation), and internationalization
(growth of EMNEs). By presenting the opportunity space of business model
transformation that allows the focal firm to increase its value creation and value
capture potential, the thesis provides a richer account of the connection between
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business model and value, articulating the role of mechanisms and processes for
value creation and value capture in a business model’s functioning and
transformation. Finally, it extends these notions across various contexts, such a
complex dental providers in Germany and emerging market multinationals from
diverse countries.
5.3.2 Organizational and managerial implications
My theorizing on business model transformation may appeal useful to
managers in providing them with empirically grounded lenses, or also referred to
as heuristics, of business model dynamics of innovation and growth through
internationalization for paying attention to what history suggests, but cannot
prove, matters. Much management literature emphasizes objectivity and keeping
manager’s creativity and imagination out of the analysis by presupposing rational
decision-‐making. The business model transformation framework presented in this
thesis appeals to managers because it intuits a place for them by allowing space
for their imagination and not only rational decision-‐making. It offers descriptive
theorizing allowing managers strategic choice. The underlying heuristics admit and
shape managers’ creative capabilities, as opposed to positivist theory, which
restricts managers to rational decision-‐making.
Managers are encouraged to examine their behaviors and their underlying
assumptions in relation to the various dimensions and constraints determining the
opportunity space of business model transformation. Managing these dimensions
requires different leadership skills that enable firm wide opportunity realization.
Thus, leaders are encouraged to observe the relationship between particular skills
and the constraints dimensions to reinforce these dimensions throughout the
opportunity realization process when transforming their business models.
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Managers’ roles could be tracked by surveying firms to determine managers’
behavior that supports the opportunity realization determined by the constraints
and those that hamper the behavior that hampers their development. This will
allow managers to assess the effect of their behavior on the transformation of
their business models.
Therefore, a focus on an organizational level constraint of the opportunity
space of business model transformation, as identified by the firm-‐level
antecedents of business model innovation, will allow managers to continuously
subject their assumptions and expectations to challenges that may seem distant
from competitive realties. One important implication of focusing on the notion of
business models and their core logics of value creation and value capture is
questioning firms’ dominant logics that keep firms confined to their established
boundaries and standards. Moving beyond these boundaries and standards is one
important mechanism through which firms could strike out into different domains
and sometimes into uninhabited lands through business model transformation
and the realization of the provided opportunity space. Yet, managers are
encouraged to take distance from pure rational decision-‐making and instead
challenge more their creative capabilities and their imagination. It is this stretching
exercise that opens up new opportunities determined by the business model
transformation constraints and provides firms with possibilities and tools to
conquer new lands that contain the seeds for tomorrow’s victory.
In addition, findings suggest that managers could develop and
institutionalize business model transformation and the dimensions of the
opportunity space determining the levels of the transformation to continuously
pursue opportunity and proactively use their capabilities. Thus, managers should
not view their activities, the orchestration of the activity systems and their
required capabilities as static repositories, but rather as sources that ignite
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potential links and open up new possibilities. Business model transformation
intuits them a space to do that. This, in turn, requires viewing firms as part of their
larger ecosystems, as some activities and the required capabilities may be
embedded within these ecosystems and not necessarily internally possessed by
the firm. Also, in their attempt to adapt to an evolving ecosystem, business models
may transform the entire ecosystem during their own transformation while
pursuing the realization of opportunities. Transformation of firms’ boundaries in
relation to the activities in the activity system and in the ecosystem, resources,
capabilities, and opportunities is an important exercise that business model
transformation encourages and managers should prudently attend to.
Further more, the multi-‐dimensional nature of business model
transformation indicates that integration among the constraints of the
opportunity space is an important determinant of success of the transformation of
the business model. Yet, managers should note that fruitful integration is never a
straightforward exercise; it requires collective interpretations of activities and
choices that go beyond their individual functional characteristics. It is about
knowing the links among activities and choices and how they apply to
opportunities. Business model transformation involves a great deal of customizing
to the opportunity at hand, as two opportunities are never the same. Thus,
systematically exercising business model transformation through the realization
and enactment of the opportunity space implies that managers will gain
experience with activities and their interdependencies in the activity system and
how they should be applied from one opportunity to another.
Another important managerial implication of my research is its illustration of
the difficulties emerging markets multinationals face in their attempt to manage
the growth of their business models as they internationalize, as discussed in
chapter 4. Managers need to be aware of these difficulties as their firms expand
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internationally to advanced and developing economies. Awareness of these
difficulties promises early attention to problems associated with innovation and
transformation of business models, as well as, the decision to either exploit or
explore their ownership advantages and leverage or develop new business
models, and their implications for firms’ success. Our observations also show that
managers need to jointly consider the opportunity space available, owing to the
inseparable nature of knowledge.
Furthermore, our study demonstrates the effect of the dual setting of
emerging multinationals on the internationalization of their business models,
which therefore constitutes one of five main constraints of the opportunity space
of business model transformation. Although, emerging multinationals expand to
leverage their core activities and stretch and develop others, this is not an
automatic process. This process requires judicious selection of activities that could
be generalized from one setting to another to avoid misleading integration of
activities. In addition, managers should note that signals of opportunity and time
frames could not be extended from one setting to another. Thus, managers should
expect that managing business models internationally would exhibit pronounced
differences from exercising it domestically.
The conceptual framework advanced in this dissertation could assist
managers in both creating a new business model and further developing an
existing one, inspired by business model innovation, business model
internationalization and business model transformation. In that, managers need to
be aware of the dynamic, multi-‐level nature of business models, and their inherent
need for alteration and transformation over time in alignment with the needs of
the venture, the priorities posed by key stakeholders and the evolution of the
ecosystem. Such changes can make previously successful business models
obsolete and in demand of major adaptation and transformation. Furthermore,
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managers need to understand the interdependency between activities and what
each activity of the activity system contributes to the whole as well as how
altering one activity, or the connection and interdependency between activities,
may have significant implications for the business model’s sustainability.
Finally, the lack of coherence in a business model can hamper its successful
functioning and reduces its value creation and value capture potential. Managers
should be aware of the mechanisms for value creation and value capture and the
parties that could benefit from it. Managers should further understand how the
interdependency between activities in the activity system, which leads to a
coherence of the business model, further leads to the development or acquisition
of new distinctive competences and strategic resources, which can bring new
opportunities for the business model development and its transformation if
sustained and leveraged over time, as discussed in chapter 3. The newly
developed or acquired distinctive competences and strategic resources can help in
refining the value creation and capture logic of the business model, and also
create opportunities for diversification, which is particularly important to firms in
niche markets and aiming to grow, as presented in chapter 4. Thus, managers
should understand that business model transformation is a fragile process that
involves delicate intricacies.
5.4 Limitations and Future Research
Despite the important theoretical and practical implications of this thesis, it
is important to consider the contributions within the dissertation’s limitations that
may open up future research avenues. While the main part of my dissertation
research program, presented in this thesis by the three essays and the discussion
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in which I develop the conceptual framework on business model transformation,
places the focus on theory building and establishing the theoretical milestones,
the second part and my future research of the complete dissertation research
program, aims at empirical testing of the built theory on business model
innovation antecedents and internationalization of business models respectively in
the subsequent four essays.
Further research in progress as part of the PhD research program portfolio.
Literature is short on empirical studies that actually capture and explore the
enablers of business model transformation and the underlying dynamics that drive
strategic renewal of the focal firm. My research on business model innovation and
business model internationalization presented in this thesis leads to subsequent
additional research and articles, which do not constitute part of this thesis, in
which I test the here proposed theoretical model of business model innovation
through different quantitative methods of multivariate analysis and the theoretical
model of business model internationalization through the case study method. The
case study method is becoming a mainstream method for new process analyses as
it addresses important questions and raises critical concerns on process
improvement and trajectory development to build theory. Yet, the application of
the case study method with the objective to make generalizations should aim at
discovering new facts about the reality with the precaution of applying that
learned from the case studies to similar processes as not even a large number of
cases or observations will provide a general theory or serve as absolute
verification (Gomm, Hammersley, & Foster, 2000; Stake, 1994).
In this thesis, I present the first part of my PhD research program constituted
by the three essays. Given that little research exists about the dynamics of
business model transformation, which are explored in this dissertation as the
lenses of business model innovation and internationalization, I believe this topic
198 | Page
will benefit from a qualitative research design to build testable mid-‐range theory
from rich and replicable evidence (Eisenhardt, 1989; Eisenhardt & Graebner,
2007). Multiple, comparative case studies allow for replication logic and result in
an enriched understanding of the dynamics at play (Yin, 1994). Theory
development, particularly grounded theory, is the main focus of this part of the
thesis. In the second part of my PhD research program, I present four articles that
represent the immediate future research in which I test the theories and
conceptual models developed in the three essays of the first part of my PhD
research program.
Given that little research exists using a quantitative methodology in the business
models literature, whereby most of the few existent publications focus mainly on
performance and controlling measures (Clark, 2013; Froud, Johal, Leaver, Phillips,
& Williams, 2009; Kind, Nilssen, & Sørgard, 2009; Lazonick & Tulum, 2011; Patzelt,
Knyphausen-‐Aufseß, & Nikol, 2008; Susarla, Barua, & Whinston, 2009; Zott & Amit,
2007, 2008; as well as recent SEJ Special Issue ‘Business Models’ by guest editors
Demil, Lecocq, Ricart, and Zott (2015, Vol. 9, No.: 1): Brea-‐Solís et al., 2015;
Gerasymenko et al., 2015; Kim & Min, 2015; Osiyeveskyy & Dewald, 2015), the
main objective of the second part of PhD dissertation research portfolio is to
identify instrumentalization of variables and develop quantitative methodology to
test the developed theories in this thesis. Quantitative research is the next
consequent step. The move towards broadly quantitative analysis is very
important for further development of this area of research.
To extend my research on the first enabler of business model
transformation, namely business model innovation, in Essay 4, I apply a
quantitative research design and test the developed framework empirically by
applying multivariate analysis. The findings confirm the four identified
antecedents of business model innovation and elaborate the theory by presenting
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how the antecedents impact differential firm performance. My future research
further elaborates in Essay 5 on my initial research on business model innovation
by empirically exploring through a quantitative methodology how complex service
providers can achieve maximum fit between their business model and ecosystems.
Further, I extend my future research on growth through business model
internationalization as the second enabler of business model transformation by
testing the theoretical model developed in my third essay presented in this thesis.
Here, in Essay 6, I explore the developed framework and test the four identified
internationalization strategies in a new context, namely on emerging
multinationals from South Africa. In Essay 7, by following a mixed method
approach, I apply the qualitative, case study approach as well as quantitative
methods in order to perform a strategic group analysis in the context of emerging
firms from Latin America, also referred to as Multilatinas, with the objective to
confirm the existence of the four identified internationalization strategies of
EMNEs. Figure 5.2 presents the structure of my PhD research program and the
four subsequent essays of my future research.
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Figure 5.2: PhD research program: Future research
In addition to the future research already in progress under my own PhD
research program, this thesis highlights six common areas that represent the
collective contributions of the presented three essays in this thesis, and I link
these contributions to potential research topics that may prove useful in shaping
the future research agenda.
201 | Page
Context focus. Throughout the chapters of this dissertation I focused on
particular contextual factors that were seen as relevant to the analysis of how
business model innovation and growth through internationalization of emerging
multinationals transpire as the enablers of business model transformation.
However, the notion of context includes a variety of contextual parameters such
as cultural, industry, sector and economic wide characteristics. Originality comes
at the price of limitations of the generalizability of the results presented and
discussed in this thesis. Thus, another limitation of this thesis is the limited
generalization due to the "specific context" being used for the analyses; that is,
the German dental industry in chapter 3 and the internationalization of EMNEs in
chapter 4.
Future research should assess and empirically validate the relevance of these
contextual factors across different contexts, as it would be interesting to learn the
following: How do these contextual factors affect the constraints of the
opportunity space setting? How do these contextual factors affect the type of
opportunity firms realize and enact through business model transformation? What
is the effect of the different types of opportunities on the enablers of business
model transformation? How do the emerging and created opportunities affect the
contexts that gave rise to them in the first place? How do the emerging and
created opportunities affect the convergence and divergence of industries?
Attending to these questions allows moving the notion on business models
in the field of strategic management from a focus on the origin of opportunities to
a focus on the type of opportunities and the contexts they are embedded in.
Moreover, future research should link different contexts. For instance, future
research could explore what we could learn from applying the business model
innovation antecedents identified in the context complex service providers in
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Germany when applied in a very different context in a different industry and/or
different country; that is: How do the identified business model innovation
antecedents apply in emerging markets? Such research questions require
collaborative efforts.
Business model transformation perspective. Extant literature on business
models has acknowledged and adopted the view of firms and their strategy as
complex systems of interdependent activity choices (Miller, 1981; Siggelkow,
2011; Thompson, 1967; Zott & Amit, 2010). However, research on business models
mainly developed in silos and researchers did not agree on a common definition of
the concept, which has limited the comparability and replicability of prior studies
and most importantly the use and development of the concept. For future
directions, the distinction of the three perspectives identified in the first essay of
this thesis is promising because each perspective addresses a different level of
analysis and different terminology, as well as different theoretical foundations.
Consequently, future research should focus empirically on the relationship of the
constituting elements of the business model for each of the three perspectives in
order to obtain further insights about the business model concept, which are
relevant for further research on business model transformation. More specifically,
it would be interesting to analyze the effects of varying numbers and content of
each type of element on business model transformation. For example, how does
the business model design differ between having three homogenous or
heterogeneous core-‐elements versus having six of them, and how does it affect
the transformation of the business model? Is a business model with a larger
number of elements more likely to sustain a competitive advantage or does it –
even under homogenous themes – increase the modularity and make imitation
more likely?
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Future research could also explore which parts of the adaptation process of
business model transformation to an evolving ecosystem are planned, and which
parts are emergent, and how can the best fit between the transformed business
model and the ecosystem be achieved. Further, with respect to the identified
constraints of the opportunity space of business model transformation, future
research could explore the best timing for business model transformation to take
place predicated on the assumption that further changes in the ecosystem will
occur. Following evolutionary theory, future research could analyze the
differentiation between intentional change and unintentional change of business
models in an evolving ecosystem. I approach the current research from the
business model and strategy perspective, however, future research could explore
the presented research topics from the institutional theory perspective. Future
research could also analyze the network effects of business model transformation
and its realization of the opportunity space.
Further, I am taking an agentic approach to business model transformation
placing the concept in an agentic world as a complement to strategy. Although I
am limited in my treatment of individual behavior in this thesis, I believe that a
deeper analysis of the differences between the activity system set-‐up applied here
and human operations would be fruitful. Studying this relationship would be a
promising path for bridging the firm or system-‐level approach that I have chosen
in this thesis with more micro-‐level research, such as the strategy-‐as-‐practice view.
In particular, future research could address the following areas: When managers
make strategic choices and perform activities, they might face cognitive
misperceptions of interdependencies of the activities in the business model. For
example, they might misinterpret existing or non-‐existing interdependencies or
perceive peaks as high even though they are small in the greater scheme. As such,
capabilities required that allow for interpretation and the actual behavior that
follows should be studied further. Future research could explore the dynamics
204 | Page
between the business model on a firm level and the behavioral aspects of
individuals and groups.
Role of interdependency. While the concept of interdependency has been
acknowledged as crucial in understanding the evolution and strategic renewal of
firms (Levinthal, 1997; Rivkin & Siggelkow, 2007; Simon, 1962), research has
viewed interdependency designs mainly as given by nature (Zhou, 2013) and
focused on a particular type, namely, complementarity (Milgrom & Roberts, 1995).
The literature needs greater conceptualization and theorizing about the
characteristics of interdependency of activities, the subsequent business model
transformation and the underlying dynamics to better explain the role that
interdependencies among activities appear to play on the ability of the business
model to renew, evolve and travel in continuously changing environments
(Siggelkow, 2011). Further, the distinction between interdependency and
interaction between activities provides another fruitful avenue for future
theorizing about their interplay and implications on strategic change and
transformation outcomes. A research agenda for studying interdependency of
activities in a business model could cover such questions as: What are sources and
types of interdependency? What are the value consequences of different types of
interdependency? How do different types and their value consequences evolve
over time? A starting point to address these questions could be to build on the
literature reviewed in this paper to further classify types of interdependency and
link them to the different choices in activity systems. Moreover, future research
could explore the effects of environmental changes on existing interdependencies
of the business model and what impact this has on the business model
transformation.
Ecosystem dimension. Unlike other concepts in strategic management
literature, the business model concept does not solely focus on firms’ internal or
205 | Page
just the external activities; it rather stresses the importance of a boundary-‐
spanning concept considering activities within and outside firms’ boundaries.
Hence, the discussion presented across the preceding chapters of the dissertation
notes the importance of considering firms’ ecosystems. As such, a focus on firms’
ecosystems comprises interesting topics for future research such as: How can
firms achieve maximum fit between their business model and ecosystem, and
what exactly defines such fit? When would be the right time to adapt a firm’s
business model, given the possibility that further change might happen in the
ecosystem? What capabilities are necessary to transform the business model to an
evolving ecosystem? What are the implications for the interdependency among
activities in the activity system? An interesting empirical challenge would be how
to operationalize business model transformation and relate it to firm’s
performance outcomes. Such research would require multiple data sources,
interviews, surveys, and archival data, which, in turn, would permit drawing
statistical robust conclusions because one data source would make up for the
biases inherent in another.
Role of internationalization. The research on growth of the business model
through internationalization attempts to throw light on the internationalization
trajectories of emerging multinationals by proposing a conceptual framework of
the underlying internationalization strategies. Future empirical research is needed
to substantiate the presented observations and uncover the sequence and the
causal links between the underlying processes of internationalization. My research
noted the impact of emerging multinationals’ attributes such as their origin and
the host destination on their internationalization and consequent business model
management processes. The fact that these firms internationalize suggests that
they will pursue a myriad of opportunities, examining the types of these
opportunities and how they impact business model transformation and expansion
are important areas for future research. Gaining an understanding of the type of
206 | Page
opportunities would help future research to outline the differences between
emerging multinationals’ business model design and transformation and other
firms, perhaps in developed markets.
Moreover, the validity of my ideas needs to be empirically tested. Large
sample studies may be attempted to formulate and test specific hypotheses with
regard to the business model and business model transformation as a specific
firm-‐level factor that enables the internationalization of EMNEs. The next logical
step is also to analyze whether the distinct internationalization trajectories and
business model management strategies are associated with any performance
differentials. Thus, future research should systematically analyze and test which of
the identified internationalization and business model management strategies
creates more value for the EMNEs and allows for increased value appropriation
and under what circumstances and conditions, and what are the drivers of
differential firm performance. Additional research on the nature of EMNEs’
internationalization trajectories would be useful; that is, distilling the drivers,
enablers and impediments of the business model innovation process during
internationalization seems very relevant. In addition, future research would
greatly benefit from a deeper analysis of the capabilities needed in each of the
four business model management strategies.
Theory of the firm. The presented conceptual model of business model
transformation developed from the findings of my preceding research is
predicated on several assumptions. Firstly, I propose the assumption that the
business model concept is complementary to strategy. Strategy presupposes
uncertainty. The agentic view on business models, which I employ here, too
assumes the underlying notion of Knightian uncertainty, which is argued to be the
source of profit (Knight, 1965). Secondly, driven by the notion of continuity, the
business model is a dynamic concept in motion. Thirdly, strategic analysis is
207 | Page
generally not considered part of the literature on the theory of the firm, however,
strategic management presupposes a theory of the firm. For instance, Chandler
defines the firm as a production function that meets a particular market segment
and should be internally structured to do this optimally. Thus, one can conclude
that strategy follows structure. Consequently, in this line of thought, there is a
need for a new concise theory of the firm (Demsetz, 1988; Foss & Klein, 2005). The
concept of business model transformation developed from my preceding research
offers a step in this direction.
5.5 Final Summing Up
Throughout the chapters of this dissertation, I have expended considerable
effort to explicate the concept of business model transformation and its
underlying dynamics through the lenses of innovation and internationalization of
business models and clarify its role across multiple contexts. In large part, this
effort attempts to offer an understanding of firm-‐level business model
transformation as a collective ability through which firms integrate their
capabilities, existing within and outside their boundaries. The identified
opportunity space of business model transformation intuits a place for the firm
and identifies only the reasonable possibility of a firm rather than its actualization.
This dissertation defines business model transformation as a mean to allow the
focal firm to attain scale, raise the threshold of viability, as well as find new market
space by enacting its opportunity space through value creation and value capture
with the goal to adapt to an evolving ecosystem. I propose a conceptual
framework of business model transformation by integrating the results and
contributions of my preceding research across various contexts.
208 | Page
The focus on business model transformation within diverse contexts gives
rise to positive observation; despite the contextual variety, the robustness of the
conceptualization of business model transformation still holds and allows to shed
light on the underlying dynamics of business model innovation and growth
through internationalization. This dissertation reflects a high degree of diversity,
which allows a close investigation of the manifestation of business model
transformation and the underlying dynamics in diverse contexts. This, in turn,
brings focus on the differences among the type of opportunities pursued and their
implications for value creation and value capture. This leads to an exciting
conclusion; although seemingly challenging, being attentive to the role of context
enriches our conceptualizations and promises new and useful insights into the
phenomenon under investigation. Finally, it must be pointed out that the notion of
business model transformation with its underlying dynamics of innovation and
internationalization is a complex phenomenon and that this dissertation alone
cannot settle any definitional or conceptual debate on the matter. It can only start
to clarify the elements and perspectives that might constitute and influence these.
209 | Page
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